Beauty of Wikipedia
One can say a lot about Wikipedia. There’s also a beautiful side of the project, please see:
Blofeld’s Angels of Death
One can say a lot about Wikipedia. There’s also a beautiful side of the project, please see:
This is really nice that an innovative scientific wiki - WikiGenes links to its senescent rival Wikipedia.
Recently Wikipedia has been chosen as a platform for open, collaborative knowledge database about the Human Genome1. WikiGenes wiki is far more technically advanced and is based on entirely different contribution model. It seems that WikiGenes is going to be a Wikipedia killer in this respect.
Wikipedia is huge, Wikipedia is a household name for an encyclopedia (remember Britannica?), Wikipedia even has developed its own folklore.
Have a laugh at Wikipedia’s Lamest edit wars.
Wikipedia is great and it is huge. Schools especially in the developing world need good, free sources of knowledge. And Wikipedia’s main aims is to provide such a source of knowledge. Not necessarily is it ideally suited for for use in schools and by schoolchildren.
Therefore a project has been created within the Wikipedia community and in conjunction with SOS Children that main goal was to create a selection of Wikipedia articles for schools. The project’s website is:
http://schools-wikipedia.org/.
Best articles from the English Wikipedia were “handpicked”, fact checked, proofread and reviewed for accuracy and suitability. Extra material was added that is specifically selected to be of interest to children who follow the UK National Curriculum and similar curricula elsewhere in the world. Of course, all material that might be regarded as of adult nature was meticulously excluded. This is the 2007 edition of the material and it is also available as a CD-ROM/DVD or can be downloaded for free zip file (792 MB) or torrent (2.5 GB).
The selection is roughly equivalent to a 15 volume encyclopaedia with 24 000 pictures, 14 million words and articles on 4 625 topics.
Aside from being accessible on the site, it is also possible to download the entire selection via BitTorrent (2.5GB compressed with full size images, 792MB compressed with only thumbnail images).
Dr Andrew Cates, of SOS Children and himself a Wikipedia administrator, said:
“Wikipedia offers a fantastic learning resource. We are delighted to have been able to play a part in increasing the number of children who will be able to benefit from it. We are indebted to the volunteers in our offices and on Wikipedia who helped check articles and to the Wikipedia community for their help with this project.”
Further future updates of the Wikipedia School Selection are planned.
To request a DVD copy, email info@tuxlabs.co.za and put “Wikipedia for Schools” in the subject field.
… online collaboration Wikipedia-style
In spite of widespread criticisms of problematic credibility of Wikipedia content, the online encyclopedia is sometimes praised for coverage of dramatic events of global interest like:
The editing process happening practically simultaneously (in real time) and at a frantic pace managed to create well-researched, reliable articles in a relatively short time, short enough not to lose its topical relevance of a good news source. When an event or a disaster of massive global interest strikes Wikipedia seems to be suprisingly a dependable (sometimes the best) news source on the net.
This remarkable success of online collaborative journalism (?) was noted by both by blogosphere and the mainstream media (NYT for example). It seems that this is a unique and unparalleled phenomenon.
It might be interesting, I think, to study these examples of the Wikipedia Explosive Editing Phenomenon (WEEP, what an acronym, heh
) and compare with a representative sample of other Wikipedia articles.
Maybe some insightful conclusions might be drawn from this study with implications for Wiki(pedia) and other online grassroots journalism projects.
See also: Assessing the value of cooperation in Wikipedia by HP Labs researchers Dennis M. Wilkinson and Bernardo A. Huberman
References:
The 2007 Annual Wikimedia Poland Conference is currently under way in BiaĆowieza in northern Poland.
The conference is scheduled for 3 days (May 1-3, 2007) and is going to gather large crowds of Wikipedians/Wikimedians as well as several prominent authors, scientists and other lecturers who will host a wide range of interesting and thought-provoking presentations.
I hope the proceedings of the Conference is going to be published some time in future because I could not attend the event.
It may seem a little odd that only yesterday I discovered this interview called Wikipedia in Poland with Jimmy Wales, the co-founder of Wikipedia (see more about him in his Wikipedia entry and personal userpage.
On September 26th the Polish Wikipedia, a Polish language version of the famous Wikipedia, was celebrating its fifth anniversary. The anniversary sparked interest of the media. One of many press feature articles was Encyclopedists Unite in a popular Polish daily newspaper Rzeczpospolita.
I was one of a few Polish Wikipedia editors intervied for the article.

Wikimania 2006 - The Annual International Wikimedia Conference - was held from August 4th through August 6th in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the Harvard Law School campus.
Discussions, panels and presentations covered mainly subjects related to the Wikimedia Foundation projects but also subjects of free content, free knowledge and free culture.
Proceedings of the Conference will be published later but at the moment numerous recordings of some of the presentations are available online.
See also:
Additional information on the event is available through:
On July 11th, 2006 the Polish version of the famous Wikipedia reached the number of 250,000 entries.
The Polish Wikipedia is the fourth largest language version of the project following English, German and French versions.