[Foundation-l] Re: Positive discrimination related to smaller communities and projects
Ray Saintonge
saintonge at telus.net
Tue Mar 29 00:32:58 UTC 2005
Brion Vibber wrote:
> Sites like Wiktionary or Wikinews are not really suitable for a wiki to
> begin with. I think it's unfortunate that people have so casually thrown
> "Wiki" on the front of the name and slapped up a new project wiki
> without any actual plan for making it work.
>
> Wikipedia is *very well* suited to a wiki model because an encyclopedia
> is largely unstructured prose text, with cross-references between
> articles and some light indexing. That's exactly what a wiki is, and our
> wiki software is strongly geared to that.
>
> Wiktionary requires structured data which is *completely* unlike what
> the wiki model provides. The project's been limping along with
> unstructured text for years and is going to have a hard time converting
> all that when the appropriate software is finally written for it (a
> project which is soon to get underway, I'm told, with a grant for
> development which Erik Moeller will be working on).
This really depends on the vision that one applies to a dictionary. If
the focus is on the host language of a particular Wiktionary the present
software can be made to do, but I can see where it will not be adequate
for Gerard's vision of a super-dictionary. The super-dictionary has a
much stronger focus on translation issues, and that can tolerate
somewhat less semantic debate than might be the case in a particular
language. Once the super-dictionary has a working model it will
probably be easier to co-ordinate between that and the various language
specific projects.
Ec
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