--- "steven l. rubenstein" rubenste@ohiou.edu wrote:
The only thing I can imagine is this: when a page has reached this state it is usually through the hard work of a few editors (and I am not trying to deny the contributions of countless other people). I suggest those editors save that version of the article as sub-pages to their user pages. If there is ever major vandalism of the article, or if it seriously degrades over a long period of time, those editors have a point of reference (without having to go back through the edit history) of when they thought of it as "done."
What we really need is to pay and/or bribe and/or beg a developer to fix the performance issues of the 'rate this article version' feature. Then the highest rated version of an article would be prominently linked from the top of the most recent version of the article. It would also be neat if one could indicate whether or not particular votes were useful and if the most recent version of the article is still as good or bad (a cur diff would be displayed so comparisons would be easy).
Logged-in users would have the option of displaying the highest rated version of an article if and when available. But I think it is *very* important that we never have that as a global default; the big thing wikiwiki has going for it is the instant gratification factor and vandalism should not be hidden behind a higher rated but older version.
Also, at the bottom of each page there should be an automatically-created citation line that gives the exact page version you are looking at. I see there is already a 'Permanent link' feature in the sidebar - but who the hell is going to know what that is for? Citing a Wikipedia article is currently useless w/o this feature (anybody checking such a cite could not be sure which of the many versions on any particluar day were actually used).
Another idea: I'd love to have the ability to rate other editors and trust by proxy what users whose opinion I trust think of editors they have rated (trusting by double proxy may also be useful). No data on any one person's rating would be public; the data would only be used to filter out edits made by trusted members of the community so that more attention can be paid to those who are still unknown or who are known but not trusted. Much of the major data processing for this feature could be done on the client's computer like this: *raw RC/watchlist data would be downloaded to your computer *your user ratings and the user ratings of the people whose opinion you trust are also downloaded (this would be incrementally updated as needed) *your computer would do all the sorting by user name Of course, there will still be lots and lots of extra reads and writes with this feature unless a completlely separate p2p editing client is used.
The current system is just not scaling very well. If we want to stay open, then we *need* to invest in some serious software and database improvements. All of the above will have a very significant database hit, but I think it is all worth if since it should push us toward the production of better quality content.
-- mav
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