on 6/24/07 2:44 AM, David Goodman at dgoodmanny@gmail.com wrote:
There are also de facto projects. For example, the few people who devote themselves to TfD, or the ones grouped around image fair use. Or, as George Herbert implied, the ones who assemble here.
Or at AfD--people specialize, and the only person who attempted to comment on them all just got indefinitely blocked as an SPA, to general relief.
There are of course problems with multiple self-organizing mini-groups--for one, they get isolated; I found out by accident just now that a major question which is just beginning to be discussed at one place has been almost fully decided & implemented at another. For another, one persona can dominate, and then there are no fixed limits on what they can consider their scope.
There is no way to deal with this many things going on without a considerable human overhead--at present it's done by volunteers from the ordinary people, selected by interest and perseverance and thickness of skin--in your model, they'd be selected from above. Just whom among the present WP people do you think qualified to do that? Or are to elect our judges? -- that doesn't have any better a record.
On 6/23/07, Marc Riddell michaeldavid86@comcast.net wrote:
on 6/23/07 3:39 AM, David Goodman at dgoodmanny@gmail.com wrote:
I see a structure--a cellular structure of groups that only sometimes interact. If the group is reasonably small, under 50 or so--of whom in general 5 to 10 will actually be active, and if the interfaces between the groups are kept limited and channelized, the organization can continue. The cells I have in mind are he Wikiprojects. Many of them work really well to maintain order in their work (I'm thinking particularly of Chemistry) and are reasonably hospitable to adequately informed newcomers. But they work only incidentally with the other groups. they appear in the general forums when something of critical concern to them appears, but otherwise they leave the rest of the wiki alone. Look at most of the admin candidates--they have each of them contributed substantially only within a scope of a few pages. When the become admins, they do a little general activity, but most remain fairly limited even in that. They are like the country members, who come to the capitol only on special occasion.
David,
Just thinking here: It would seem there are many active editors who are not formal members of an established WP Project (myself included). This would include persons who do mostly statistical editing (birth & death dates, place of birth, sports stats, etc.) as well as grammatical cleanup and the like. So as to involve all active editors in the Project's organization, how about grouping them in their own Project?
Marc
David, George, Ray, Mangoe and all others concerned with the structure of Wikipedia,
Wait a minute! I woke up this morning and, in all senses, smelled the coffee. What are we doing here!?! We appear to be embarking on a serious discussion of structuring an entity that, supposedly, already exists. We are not developers staring at a blank screen, or sheet of paper (to place it in my era) planning something from the ground up.
Before I spend another second of my time on this issue, or ask anyone else to do the same, I need to be taught some things:
1) Where does the founder, Jimmy Wales, fit into all of this? Isn't this something he should be initiating, or, at the very least, directly involved in? And what do you, Jimmy, think of the present day-to-day operating structure of the Project?
2) What is the Foundation's role in the issue of the Project's structure? And, what responsibility does it have in overseeing such a venture.
3) Who, or what, in fact does direct the day-to-day functioning of the Project right now?
4) If we did come up with an extraordinarily creative plan for structuring the Project (and with Berks in the works no doubt we would :-)) to whom would we present it for implementation?
Our work on this should not be seen as simply a catharsis for some restless natives.
Marc Riddell