On Wed, 30 Jun 2004 02:06:46 UTC, Brion Vibber brion@pobox.com wrote:
David Gerard wrote:
Instead of putting the newbie/anon posts in an approval queue, let them go through to the wiki live and direct as they do now - but create a special: page specifically to display those contributions.
Like this? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/newbies
This was added as a quick hack a week or so back and doesn't show the usernames, hopefully it'll be fleshed out when someone has time.
Nice feature.
I'd like to toss a couple of ideas out, without attachment to the results, having been on the receiving end of enough "why don't you just program this" items to last a lifetime.
These lines could be sorted by the submitter ot the change, turning the faceless entities into something resembling people. At present, of course, if an edit looks like vandalism, one can check User Contributions to see if that's the user's pattern of behavior; but having the user's edits grouped together in this way would encourage looking at them together, which would automatically bring out any patterns.
Further: a list of recent edits by randomly selected anons & newbies could be a sort of alternate watchlist. When I've made my daily check that the articles I know about haven't been crapped on, I click on the alternate list, and see what a few random new editors are doing. Somebody else clicks and gets a different list. If a bunch of people did this, we'd have a much improved spotting of new vandals, misguided flaming newbies, and astoundingly good new contributors. It could feed into some kind of mentoring, as advocated by Ed Poor.
If the practice of watching Recent Chagnes is getting overwhelmed by the mass of new data, something like this might be a useful replacement.