On Mon, Jul 18, 2022 at 12:15 AM Amanda Lawrence <amanda.lawrence@rmit.edu.au> wrote:

Thanks for sharing Andrew, this is great. The video reel is amazing! It says 2015 at the start - is it meant to say 2018?


Yes, sadly the best videos we have are from 2015. The Wikimedia Foundation had a dedicated storytelling and video team that did this "Edit" annual video for a while, and their production quality peaked around 2015. Since then, there have been no good summary videos. Perhaps an AI system could make a video for any given year in the future. :)
 
I'd be keen to find out more ideas on interactive exhibitions if you or others have any other links or info to share. The Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) here in Melbourne is wanting to do something with Wikimedia next year and it would be great to dream up something special with them. 

We also have two events on in Sydney in November - the WoW conference and the ESEAP conference - so it would be great to think about what kind of interesting display we could do then. 

How did you do the video compilation? 

The video compilation was done by me using a number of different videos from the movement. I need to do a better job documenting all of them, but here is a list from a previous iteration fo the video:

https://vimeo.com/191543645

I will be sharing more thorough documentation about this on this page:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikipediaSpace#Wikimedia_Space_2.0_(2022)

--
-Andrew Lih
Author of The Wikipedia Revolution
US National Archives Citizen Archivist of the Year (2016)
Knight Foundation grant recipient - Wikipedia Space (2015)
Wikimedia DC - Outreach and GLAM
Previously: professor of journalism and communications, American University, Columbia University, USC
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Email: andrew@andrewlih.com
WEB: https://muckrack.com/fuzheado
PROJECT: Wikipedia Space: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WP:WPSPACE