The Wall Street Journal mentioned Wikipedia.org in yesterdays Business Solutions column (by Michael Totty):
A wiki page looks like any Web page, but with a difference: With the click of a button, a visitor can add new material to the page or change what's already there. Others can see it once they refresh the page. This isn't as disruptive as it sounds; all changes are tracked, and earlier versions can be restored if important information is deleted. There is even a wiki encyclopedia (Wikipedia.org), where anyone can add or amend entries. -- Wall Street Journal, Monday, January 12, 2004 Page R4
Ed Poor, aka Uncle Ed
I recently requested permission to copy some very interesting articles from a major Greek translation vortal (portal) into Wikipedia and Wikisource, asking for info on their copyright status too.
during our discussion about the copyright, the owner of the website told me that he uses Wikipedia very often and he likes it.
--Optim
--- "Poor, Edmund W" Edmund.W.Poor@abc.com wrote:
The Wall Street Journal mentioned Wikipedia.org in yesterdays Business Solutions column (by Michael Totty):
A wiki page looks like any Web page, but with a
difference: With
the click of a button, a visitor can add new
material to the page
or change what's already there. Others can see it
once they
refresh the page. This isn't as disruptive as it
sounds; all
changes are tracked, and earlier versions can be
restored if
important information is deleted. There is even a
wiki
encyclopedia (Wikipedia.org), where anyone can
add or amend
entries. -- Wall Street Journal, Monday, January 12,
2004 Page R4
Ed Poor, aka Uncle Ed
WikiEN-l mailing list WikiEN-l@Wikipedia.org http://mail.wikipedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l
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