print Wikipedia as an 20-volume encyclopedia set and
start selling it tomorrow, without having any legal
problems. Am I wrong here? Perhaps a CD-format would
be more practical though. ;-)
Also, could someone direct me to a page that
illustrates why being under the GFDL license is better
than simply being public domain. I've pretty much
ignored all the discussions before about it, but now
I'm involved in a few projects and we're thinking
about our license policies, so...
Chuck
=====
Learn Esperanto! - http://www.lernu.net/
Enciklopedio: http://eo.wikipedia.org/
___________________________________________________
Yahoo! Móviles
Personaliza tu móvil con tu logo y melodía favorito
en http://moviles.yahoo.es
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word bridge is the
English pronunciation of biritch, an older name of the game of unknown
middle eastern origin. The OED reports speculation that it may come
from a Turkish term, bir-uc which translates as "one-three" and is
said to refer to the fact that one hand is exposed and three are
concealed.
manufacture and sell the merchandise, at no cost to you. You set the
prices; if you decide to charge more than their base price, you'll get
a check in the mail.
Should we go for it?
Axel
__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Shopping - Send Flowers for Valentine's Day
http://shopping.yahoo.com
most people did not think that having
www.wikipedia.org as a multi-language portal would be
stupid. When I promote Wikipedia, I want to promote
the project *as a whole*, but I'm certainly not going
to promote www.wikipedia.org which goes to a webpage
in English if I'm promoting the in an Esperanto
magazine and I doubt people who are promoting the
German, Polish, Dutch, Spanish, etc would want to
point to that page either.
I know a lot of people who thought the Esperanto
Wikipedia was the only language that existed in the
project and I'd imagine that we're not alone in this.
I started promoting www.vikipedio.org because people
got confused when we promoted eo.wikipedia.org.
I also know a lot of people who don't speak English
who simply click off a page if they see that it's not
in a language they understand, thus they'd never get
past the English front page of Wikipedia. Also, a
dropdown box like we use at www.tejo.org might work as
well, instead of the portal as planned, but I think
the multilingual portal at www.wikipedia.org is
necessary.
Also, what's wrong if people have linked to
www.wikipedia.org from their webpages. It will still
go to Wikipedia, they don't need to change their
links! The Wikipedia is a multilingual project, not
just an English project. Plus, this is one of the
reasons why the Spanish project won't merge back with
us.
I'm crossposting this on Intlwiki-L and Wikipedia-L so
all can participate. I recommend that we continue
this discussion on Wikipedia-L.
Thanks,
Chuck
=====
You just can't not learn Esperanto! :-)
----------------------------------------
Just Learn It! - http://www.lernu.net/
My Webpage: http://amuzulo.babil.komputilo.com/
Enciklopedio: http://eo.wikipedia.org/
__________________________________________________________________
Gesendet von Yahoo! Mail - http://mail.yahoo.de
Bis zu 100 MB Speicher bei http://premiummail.yahoo.de
> I think this is more of a global (worldwide) policy
> issue, so
> discussion belongs on wikipedia-l, rather than an
> internationalization
> issue.
Ok, I subscribed today. I guess I missed the mailing
list change while I was travelling...
assist non-visual browsers is to ensure that the page content comes as
early as possible in the source code. Else on every page the user has to
wade through the same long list of navigation. This can be achieved via CSS
positioning. As a bonus, promoting the page content to the start of the
source code gives a considerable boost to search engine rankings!
As an example, try http://www.electec.co.nz/electrotec.mv - a site that
looks graphics heavy and uses DHTML menus etc. but remains accessible. Try
it in a screen reader, Lynx, or Opera with images and stylesheets off. Note
that I have used css to "hide" punctuation in the navigation and lists -
hence screen readers make a reasonable job of them.
Incidentally, all screen readers I've tried have a separate function to
read all the links on a page, so putting content first does not mean you
have to listen to the entire page before you can navigate anywhere else.
Most talking browsers are aiming to be useable with only half a dozen keys
to control them.
--
Richard Grevers