On 22/11/2007, Bryan Derksen bryan.derksen@shaw.ca wrote:
Chad wrote:
Granted, we're not completed in some areas that we should be, but there is a very large signal-to-noise ratio in terms of articles. For every core article there are 10 frivolous ones.
What's "frivolous" is in the eye of the beholder. Take a look at our top 100 most heavily trafficked pages: http://tools.wikimedia.de/~leon/stats/wikicharts/index.php?lang=en&wiki=enwiki&ns=articles&limit=100&month=11%2F2007&mode=view The non-pop-culture articles are the exception rather than the rule. Most of the list consists of articles about works of fiction, computer games, and entertainers. And also a bunch of articles about sex, of course, this being the internet. People _want_ to read about that stuff, they aren't winding up at those articles accidentally.
Wikipedia has a huge perceived signal-to-noise ratio because everybody has different ideas about what's "signal" and what's "noise." If everyone pruned out what they weren't interested in there'd be nothing at all left. Better to just ignore it.
But its not notable if I am not interested in it! (Why am I the one who always falls back of sarcastic, yet truthful statements to make their point).
Statement before about there not being 2 million perceived notable topics brought it on of course...
Peter