First, I think the argument has become clearer now,
thank you for your
information.
On 7/31/07, Casey Brown <cbrown1023(a)comcast.net> wrote:
(For the record, you were not the one arguing on
semantics, you had a
genuine question and I was happy you asked it.)
I said #wikipedia *should* be the mother channel, but it's crap now. :)
When I joined the project, it was considered the center channel or
channel for English and languages which had no their own, so
historically it was.
Then we created other channels, #wikimedia, for other projects
(tionary, quote, news, commons ...).
Today, it works for English people and perhaps for people who had no
their own language's yet. But for coordination I suppose #wikimedia
enough. I heard once Spanish Wikipedians were complainted since they
spoke Spanish on #wikipedia, and I think it bad if it is really what
happened ... but I have no reason to make it "the mother channel for
wikipedia", as what it is not now.
And ... even if it is the argument about Wikipedia at large, is it
enough to call for opinions on wikipedia-l?
I think this is the heart of the issue. #wikipedia cannot be shoehorned
into being something it is not, and in the course of nature, will never be.
There remains the question of can it be restored to playing the (valuable)
part it used to fulfill. I don't know personally, but some useful things *can*
be done to help that.
--
Jussi-Ville Heiskanen, ~ [[User:Cimon Avaro]]