[Foundation-l] a crazy idea...
Dan Grey
dangrey at gmail.com
Tue Sep 6 17:43:01 UTC 2005
On 30/08/05, Elisabeth Bauer <elian at djini.de> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> When I thought about some of the latest discussions on the list and
> meta-wiki here, I had a little crazy idea.
>
> The Wikimedia Foundation website was created a few months ago because we
> wanted something clean and clear to present to outside visitors. People
> shouldn't have to dive in the mess on meta-wiki for getting information
> about Wikimedia.
>
> However, this plan didn't work out in my opinion. WMF wiki isn't
> regularly updated, people aren't sure what should be on meta and what on
> wmf, content is duplicated on meta-wiki, translations have to be
> regularly moved from meta to the wmf wiki and so on.
>
> In my opinion, there are three options:
> * we can continue like this and try to make the best out of it
> * we can drastically reduce the number of pages on WMF, limit the
> translations and make it a very simple information site (similar to what
> was done on http://www.wikimedia.de, the german associations site)
> * or we can reunify meta-wiki and the WMF wiki under
> http://www.wikimedia.org
>
> Before some of you call now "impossible", I'd like you to think about
> it. We've managed to build an encyclopedia which is visited by thousands
> of people daily in a wiki. Of course, sometimes you find goatze on the
> main page - that's wikipedia. If an open wiki is acceptable for the most
> famous encyclopedia on the internet, it isn't for the little
> organization behind? Do we really need a classical website, with all its
> failures? Can't we just be proud of what we do and say: Yes, we build an
> encyclopedia in a wiki - and our organisation website is a wiki, too.
>
> and as wikipedia proves, you can organize a wiki in a way that visitors
> are able to find the stuff they want to know - professional looking
> mainpage etc. It just has to be done, and I think the community of
> wikimedians which is populating meta-wiki is now big enough to do this.
> Important and official pages can be protected, inofficial opinion
> pages can be marked with templates...
>
> If we want something not to be known, it should be done in a closed wiki
> anyway - as the google case has shown, the press isn't able to
> differentiate anyway between something said officially on the WMF
> website and something on a page on meta. There are multiple ways to make
> clear what is official or not, to lead the press to specifically
> dedicated pages while also providing different information for the wiki
> experienced community. And if a reporter finds the "List of wikipedians
> by favoured ice-cream flavour", so what? that's our community.
>
> Test wikipedias would be moved from meta to somewhere else, as well as
> the mediawiki documentation (there is now a dedicated mediawiki wiki) to
> not clutter up recentchanges anymore.
>
> Unifying meta and wmf would also help to bridge the slowly growing gap
> between the community and the organisation Wikimedia. Since Wikimedia
> depends on the work of volunteers, I see this as a rather dangerous
> thing. It more and more becomes "they and us" while it should be "we".
>
> Last but not least I have to admit, that I feel that there are simply
> too many wikis and websites to keep track. On my list (incomplete):
> * german wikipedia, english wikipedia, commons, mediawiki wiki,
> developer wiki, meta-wiki, german board wiki, german wikimedia website,
> wikimedia foundation website, chapter wiki, grants wiki (as good as
> closed), otrs
>
> So, I propose this for consideration and for discussing the idea to
> death, as usual ;-)
>
> greetings,
> elian
An excellent analysis with good ideas. However, I sense a general
feeling of apathy about these matters, so I expect to see little done.
The situation is quite bizarre - there are probably around a dozen
different sites or pages of sites giving information about Wikimedia
and the MediaWiki software. Some have been abandoned and some haven't.
It's practically impossible to tell which is correct and up-to-date,
and which is fossil.
Part of this is of course down to the fact that if anyone did try and
change anything, someone else would revert straight away. It's a bit
like instruction creep: people have added their own little sites and
ideas on how things should be over time, and now we have the sprawling
network outlined above.
Possibly the only group with enough clout to resolve this issue is the board.
Dan
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