[WikiEN-l] Re: Cruft
Mark Gallagher
m.g.gallagher at student.canberra.edu.au
Tue Sep 13 02:50:00 UTC 2005
G'day Snowspinner,
<snip />
> David is right. We would be better off with disks overflowing with
> band vanity, original research, and poo jokes. Those don't do damage
> to the community and to the long term success of the project. The
> fact that we have to share the volunteers on Star Trek articles with
> Memory Alpha, and that the work can never be merged does. So does
> every other fork.
Although I'm a Trekkie myself, I think Memory Alpha is a Good Thing.
It's somewhere for /Star Trek/ fans to list all sorts of non-notable
trivia that doesn't belong in Wikipedia.
So what if we have to share /Star Trek/ volunteers? Actually, as I
write that, I can see a counter-argument brewing: Trekkies might come to
Wikipedia to put in their two cents on some meaningless piece of cruft
(cruft, I say!), and stay on to write about other stuff. If they go to
Memory Alpha alone, we've lost them altogether. But I suspect that's
not your actual argument.
Why is it a Bad Thing to lose /Trek/-only contributions? Not just for
/Trek/, but for anything where fans get a little too enthusiastic to
judge encyclopaedic worth. Do we need a separate article for every
planet mentioned in passing in the /Star Wars/ movies (or in the novels,
or cartoons, or comics, or --- it'll happen --- fanfic)? How about
minor /Digimon/ characters? I've noticed that, despite the existence of
an *entire project*, /Harry Potter/ is missing vital information on what
happened in a paragraph of page 421 of the latest epic, /Harry Potter
and the Thingy-Riddled Thing/.
Would it be such a great loss to lose all of this? We're not talking
Elf-Only Inn, here.
--
Mark Gallagher
"What? I can't hear you, I've got a banana on my head!"
- Danger Mouse
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