Daniel R. Tobias wrote:
Or, is it the belief here that a "living" Wikipedia, still being actively updated and open to such updates from the general public, will continue to exist for centuries to come?
I think it's quite likely. There is some scientific software that dates back into the 1960s, even the 1950s in a couple cases, and it's still being worked on despite being started on close to the very dawn of the computer age.
As time stretches out, context-setting becomes more and more important. The thousand-year-old [[Suda]] is online - eye-opening to read its entries that are equivalent to our stubs, and be unable to get much from them because things are mentioned but not explained, and the cited works have long since vanished.
Ironically, an implication is that a Brian Peppers article then becomes needed just to supply the background to all the arguing on this list and elsewhere... :-)
Stan