We had a nice chat earlier this month about holding a wikipedia-day party
in January. Please add your thoughts here if you are interested in the
idea:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Boston#Upcoming
--
Samuel Klein @metasj w:user:sj +1 617 529 4266
Comments and anecdotes from the annual fundraiser. Worth browsing!
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Megan Hernandez <mhernandez(a)wikimedia.org>
Hi everyone,
Each year that we run the fundraiser, readers write in really lovely notes.
Please take two minutes to listen to our readers.
Enjoy!
The story I like to tell is that whilst I had heard of Wikipedia but only
looked at it a few times thereafter, when the 2004 Tsunami occurred the day
after Christmas, mainstream news organisations (TV, newspapers) were all
away from their offices. That day I turned to Wikipedia to try to
understand the scale of the event. It was Wiki editors 'on the ground' that
created the sort of information and coverage usually considered the
province of rolling news organisations only. This I now dub my 'Wiki
Epiphany'.
Wikipedia is an amazing service. Almost always, I am able to find
information on subjects I am interested in. Thanks and Kudos to all staff
and volunteers!!
My world has been opened up time and time again by Wikipedia. From studying
Detroit and computer programming to finding unbiased information on
America's history, Wikipedia has been a beacon of free speech and
information for over ten years. Sometimes, I just sit in awe of the fact
that the greatest accomplishment of man was assembled mostly by volunteers,
people who just wanted to make the world a better place.
Its made life easier for me and expanded my knowledge by allowing me to
more easily find trusted and verified information on the internet. It
organizes all the noise out there on the web and gives a great concise to
the point fact summary of what I want to know. Thank you and thank you to
the millions of volunteer editors. Wikipedia is a necessity in my life and
not just a luxury.
Wikipedia is a source of unbiased information. The caveats and notes from
the editors alert to questionable information. The links within the
articles are amazingly helpful and have led me on wonderful information
expeditions.
I'd like to thank the entire staff of wikipedia and its editors for my high
school graduation.
It's impossible to put in words. I cannot imagine Planet Earth without it
[Wikipedia]. It has changed my life forever.
My 17 year old son uses you constantly. You have made him a smarter human
being.
You guys are ^^%$#&* unbelievably awesome, keep it up!
web sites like Wikipedia are invaluable and I felt it my duty to try help
even if only a tad.
so much of the Internet has turned into self serving and unreliable junque;
so I am very, very grateful for the Wiki resource.
I regard "W" as the best and most reliable source of information available
anywhere. I don't know how you do it so please keep on with your Excellence
}i{ < That;s a butterfly for you
This is one of the best things on the internet. It goes back to the
original development of the internet and has remained ethical and true to
its origins. There appears to be no discrimination and it is available to
everyone at no cost.
I am 60 years old and I am still so cruious and interested in so many
things. Wikipedia gives me reasonable information whenever I may want it.
I use wikipedia all the time and credit it more toward my education than
college did!
It's nice to see humanity get together without any external forces for a
common good!
I am inspired by the high quality of Wikipedia and the high ideals of its
founder and its myriad contributors and editors. What a magnificent
collaborative human achievement you are building!
It has simultaneously answered and given me more questions than I can
comprehend.
This represents to me what college should be like. Free and collective
knowledge by and for all.
When I want to know something, I google it and 99% of the time Wikipedia
has what I want to know. Even drinking arguments, about what Biff from Back
to the Future is doing now, are solved by Wikipedia. It's all there.
Without Wikipedia I would be about 30% less intelligent. :(
it is like a gift from the gods of knowledge
I am a teacher and a writer, and I am amazed how often Wikipedia is useful
to me. I consider Wikipedia to be one of the great democratic projects
maybe ever, and it is one of the reasons why I try to stay optimistic about
the world. Thank you.
I honestly feel like the next generation of humans in general, will be much
smarter than the previous because of this site. Well, at least they will
know a whole lot more useless shit. I've heard (don't know for sure if it's
true, doesn't matter) that the bigger a person's brain is, typically, the
smarter that person is. So, if that is true, I think it's likely that
because of this site, in about 50 years, humans will have huge heads. Their
heads will look like the aliens' heads did in "attack from mars." If y'all
ever get into commercials for whatever reason, you could use that and
probably make it really funny :)
It's like that reliable family member or friend who's an expert at
something or the other.
I extend my heartfelt thanks to the men and women who tirelessly work on
keeping Wikipedia the wonderful website it is.
There's nothing you can't find on Wikipedia, I'd be shattered if it was
shut down.
As a computing and communications engineer I imagined an information
resource like Wikipedia before the Internet existed. I'm happy I didn't
have to be the one to build it.
My 72 year old life is easier and more fun. I read a lot and look things up
all the time, and that is now easy. That itself is fun.
It gives me hope and makes me feel connected to an invisible but powerful
community. And it settles lots of arguments before they get out of hand at
the dinner table!!!
My Dad's addicted to Wikipedia. Seriously. I can't think of a single day
I've seen him not go on here at least once. The man craves knowledge, and
one blue link leads to another. Soon enough, he has dozens of tabs open
leading to a million different things. As I hear quite often, I am my
father's daughter. I was in third period US History today reading the page
on Dmitri Kabalevsky during our homework time. I came on here right now to
make sure it would be okay to refer to France as Gallia in the book I'm
attempting to write. I come on here so many times a day, you wouldn't even
believe. I absolutely love the system you all work so hard to run, and I
hope Wikipedia stays online and banner free for dozens of years to come!
You have my full support. :)
100 years ago they said we would have flying cars, instead we got smart
phones with access to almost every book ever written, fair trade.
When i was a kid, I used to watch 'Star Trek". When Captain Kirk had a
question asked Mr. Spock and the computer with female voice. Wikipedia is a
combination of Mr. Spock and Computer.
It was my constant savior through the pitch-black hell that was high school
and has guided me through college and into my career as a nurse.
I have lived in the world without Wikipedia but it was darkish all the time
and I never want to live in our world without it again.
Wikipedia is like a playground for me. I love you for what you do.
It is easy to find reliable or at least semi-reliable information on just
about any person, place, or thing that exists. Even if it's something as
stupid as "white chocolate". The reason I was on wikipedia this evening.
Thank you.
"Look it up" is what our dad always told us when we asked a question, even
if he knew the answer. Back then we ran to the encyclopedia or dictionary;
now it's Wikipedia. Different but the same. And beyond Wikipedia's being a
tool to learn something, it makes me happy to know there are smarties out
there, collaborating in this vital, fluid, living system, spreading
knowledge. Thank you!
I remember researching in the days of microfiche & card catalogs! This is
like having the entire Encyclopedia Britannica, the OED, and so much more
at your fingertips!
I just truly enjoy getting the succinct and straight info without a lot of
bullshit.
I passed my university degree, settled numerous arguments, checked sports
stats, researched my great grandfather and just today found out the
probable origin of sheep farming! The list goes on... and on…
was one of those kids who read the encyclopedia for fun, so Wikipedia took
that to the next level.
Wikipedia is what the internet can be.
I use Wikipedia to live my life.
I, as an ordinary citizen, am able to learn and access information in a way
that would make preeminent scholars of 3000-odd years fall to their knees
and weep with joy and shock.
--
Megan Hernandez
Director of Online Fundraising
Wikimedia Foundation
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--
Samuel Klein @metasj w:user:sj +1 617 529 4266
Via phoebe. Sounds amazing.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Open Book Hack Weekend at the New York Public Library
To: CODE4LIB(a)listserv.nd.edu
Passing this on for anyone in or near NYC who might be interested. The gist
is below, and the details are here:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/open-book-hack-weekend-at-new-york-public-libr…
There will be prizes (and I hear they might be pretty good ones).
Join NYPL Labs, Readium Foundation, O’Reilly Media, Perseus Books,
> Hypothes.is, and Datalogics for Open Book Hack Weekend at the New York
> Public Library (at 42nd Street): digital book open source and content
> development based on HTML5, EPUB, and the Open Web Platform. Bring your
> hacking skills and your software/content projects or ideas for projects.
> Self-organizing teams will pursue creative app/service/content hacks to
> help us imagine the future of digital books, and advance the open source
> and open API building blocks needed for the diverse ecosystem of authors,
> designers, developers, publishers, libraries, booksellers, and readers.
--
Trevor Thornton
Senior Applications Developer, NYPL Labs
The New York Public Library
phone: 212-621-0287
email: trevorthornton(a)nypl.org
--
* I use this address for lists; send personal messages to phoebe.ayers <at>
gmail.com *
--
Samuel Klein @metasj w:user:sj +1 617 529 4266
Hello!
Earlier this fall, several editors got together at an open meeting at
Boston University to discuss the future of Wikimedia New England. Many of
us hope we can grow and develop our group into a full-fledged, officially
sanctioned Wikimedia chapter. Through separate conversations, tho, I think
it's become clear that we need a little more focus on group goals and
workings before we can get there.
I took some time recently to address the various questions that arose at
our last meeting and in subsequent emails. I also provide suggested topics
of focus for next steps:
http://etherpad.wikimedia.org/p/NEWikimedians-Nov13
For those of you who would like to continue participating with our group in
the coming year, please take some time to read through these notes and
leave any constructive comments / suggestions / ideas you may have.
thanks,
maia (user:Girona7)
Here is a job in the Boston area, possibly of interest.
VIVO is an open-source database/web tool to collect faculty info at
various campuses: i.e., their publications and research. It makes
that data digestable for the campus admins, researchers, etc. Used by
a number of medical schools to date. This is meant to be an open
source alternative to some proprietary products put out by firms like
thompson & elsevier.
via Phoebe.
----- Forwarded Message -----
From: "Kristi" <holmeskr(a)wustl.edu>
To: arl-data-sharing-support-group(a)googlegroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, October 22, 2013 7:14:28 AM
Subject: JOB OPENING: Project Director, VIVO
Please forward this announcement to anyone who may be interested.
Looking for an exciting new challenge?
DuraSpace is seeking a dynamic and entrepreneurial full-time Project
Director for the open source VIVO project ( www.vivoweb.org ), a
world-wide community focused on creating software tools, ontologies,
and services. The VIVO Project Director will have the opportunity to
play a major role in a collaborative movement that is shaping the
future of research.
See the full posting at
http://duraspace.org/sites/duraspace.org/files/DuraSpaceVivoJob_0.pdf
.
Applications are still being accepted. Note that there is no
requirement to be a U.S. citizen.
________________________________
Kristi L. Holmes, Ph.D. | Bioinformaticist | Becker Medical Library |
Washington University School of Medicine
Outreach Lead, VIVO | http://vivoweb.org
660 S. Euclid, Campus Box 8132, St. Louis, MO 63110 | 314-362-4737 |
holmeskr(a)wustl.edu
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
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To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send
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--
Phoebe Ayers
Librarian for Electrical Engineering, Computer Science & Physics
Physical Sciences & Engineering Library
University of California, Davis CA 95616
(530) 752-9948 | psayers(a)ucdavis.edu
http://lib.ucdavis.edu/pse
--
Samuel Klein @metasj w:user:sj +1 617 529 4266
Hi, all--
Just a quick reminder: if you are interested in edit-a-thons on Massachusetts history, at local archives and special collections, we have an entire series coming up this week in honor of Wikipedia Loves Libraries and Open Access week.
And many thanks to those that have helped organize the series and offered to facilitate an edit-a-thon -- Adam and Maia have been particularly generous with their time, so thank you!
Date Time Place Focus and Details
Tuesday, 10/22 9am - 2pm Center for the History of Medicine
Countway Library, Harvard Medical School History of Medicine<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Countway_OAMass13>
Tuesday, 10/22 2pm - 6:30pm Massachusetts Historical Society Philanthropists and 19th c. Boston<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/MassHist_OAMass13>
Wednesday, 10/23 12pm - 5pm Snell Library, Northeastern University Social Justice History in Boston<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Northeastern_OAMass13>
Wednesday, 10/23 12pm - 5pm Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University Massachusetts Women's History<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Schlesinger_OAMass13>
Wednesday, 10/23 5pm - 9pm Cambridge Public Library Cambridge Local History<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/CambridgePubLib_OAMass13>
Thursday, 10/24 9am - 2pm Whittemore Library, Framingham State University Massachusetts Education and Normal Schools<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/FraminghamState_OAMass13>
For more information, visit us online:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Loves_Libraries/Open_Acce…
Or contact the librarianly co-organizers, Amanda Rust (Northeastern University Libraries) and Amanda Strauss (Schlesinger Library), with any questions. We hope to see you there!
____________________________________
Amanda Rust
English & Theatre Librarian
Northeastern University
360 Huntington Avenue, Boston MA 02116
a.rust(a)neu.edu<mailto:a.rust@neu.edu> | 617-373-8548
____________________________________
____________________________________
Amanda E. Strauss
Research Librarian
Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America
Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University
amanda_strauss(a)radcliffe.harvard.edu<mailto:amanda_strauss@radcliffe.harvard.edu> | 617-384-9329
____________________________________
Hey everyone,
Great to see those of you at the New England Wikimedians meeting on
Saturday; I plan on following up soon with some of the ideas we tossed
around.
In the meantime, the Ada Lovelace Day edit-a-thon that I've been organizing
with my friend, biology professor Anne Fausto-Sterling, is set to take
place on the Brown University campus in Providence, RI this Tuesday, Oct
15, from 3-8:30pm:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Ada_Lovelace_Edit-a-thon_201…
In case you missed some of the press we've drummed up, check it out!
>From Brown <https://news.brown.edu/pressreleases/2013/10/lovelace>; from The
Chronicle of Higher
Ed<http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/wiki-edit-a-thon-at-brown-u-will-add…>;
from The Atlantic<http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/10/to-fix-wikipedia-s-ge…>;
from The Mary Sue <http://www.themarysue.com/ada-lovelace-wikipedia/>
I'm very pleased to have connected this week with Wikimedian Michael
Umbricht, who is the curator at Brown's historic Ladd Observatory. Mike
will be speaking at the edit-a-thon about the Ladd's recent GLAM project,
plus some women-in-astronomy trivia. Later in the evening, Anne will
discuss the continuing gender imbalance in the STEM fields as well as her
take on "storming" Wikipedia as a way to improve representation of women in
the annals of science history.
I know it's a bit of a trek for those in the Boston area, but if any of you
are interested, we'd love to have you join us, even for a short while. Of
course, remote contributions are also very much welcome if you can't make
it to Providence on Tuesday. For anyone I don't see in person, I hope to
catch up with you at the Mass. History Wiki edit-a-thon at the Schlesinger
Library at Radcliffe on the 23rd!
best,
maia
maiaw.com | 917-553-6158 | @20tauri | user:Girona7