Wiktionary is useful; perhaps you're referring to my comments, which were
not about Wiktionary at all. Wikiquote definitely does not belong as a
sister project. Maybe it is a "shining beacon" in the cesspool of internet
quote sites; well, there are lots of things the rest of the Internet does
poorly, that doesn't mean it's automatically the WMF's job to create a
project to do it better.
2011/9/13 David Richfield <davidrichfield(a)gmail.com>
In the discussion of the Wikinews fork (may they
thrive), I picked up
some comments predicting the death of Wiktionary and Wikiquote,
referring to the low numbers of regular contributors.
I don't think that means the projects are dying: I'm an infrequent
contributor to both of those projects, and every time I go there,
they're better. Wikiquote is continually improving in coverage and
accuracy, and Wiktionary has recently gotten new features (e.g. a
separate citations tab) and is also going forward. People are
checking recent changes: last time I edited Wiktionary, I was adding
citations to an article where the current list was in reverse
chronological order, and I was too lazy to change it, thinking
"someone else can fix this". Before I got to the third citation,
someone had fixed the sequence.
The fact that progress is slowing isn't a sign of impending death. As
long as the wikis don't stagnate to the extent that they start to get
taken over by spammers and trolls, I'm not going to hold a wake.
As for Wikiquote being one of our less useful projects, that's
possibly true, but only because the other projects are so awesome!
The web is awash with crap quotation websites of with the same
misattributed quotes being incestuously copied around - Wikiquote is
one beacon of sanity in that whole mess.
--
David Richfield
e^(πi)+1=0
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