Hi everyone,
I'm very happy to announce:
OpenRefine [1] has two Junior Developer job openings (paid contractor positions; part-time, fully remote) for building Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons [2] functionalities.
I want to very strongly encourage members of the African Wikimedia developer community to look at these vacancies and to consider applying!
* Junior Developer - Wikimedia Development [3] (6 months, from September 2021 till February 2022)
* Junior Developer - OpenRefine Development [4] (8 months, from November 2021 till June 2022)
All the best!
Sandra (User:Spinster / User:SFauconnier)
[1] https://openrefine.org
[2] https://w.wiki/UR
[3] https://openrefine.org/blog/2021/07/07/Wikimedia-Commons-reconciliation-bat…
[4] https://openrefine.org/blog/2021/07/07/OpenRefine-SDC-developer.html
Hi Everyone,
We’re happy to announce the April 2021 edition of the Technical Community
Newsletter
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Technical_Community_Newsletter/2021/April>
is now available. The newsletter is compiled by the Wikimedia Developer
Advocacy Team. It aims to share highlights, news, and information of
interest from and about the Wikimedia technical community.
Check it out, and learn about what technical contributors have been up to
this past quarter, upcoming conferences & calls for papers, and how to get
involved.
The Wikimedia Technical Community is large and diverse, and we know we
can't capture everything perfectly. We welcome your ideas for future
newsletters. Let us know what you would like to see or highlights you would
like us to include.
Subscribe to the Technical Community Newsletter
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Newsletter:Technical_Community_Newsletter>,
if you'd like to keep up with essential updates and information
Kindly,
Sarah R. Rodlund
Senior Technical Writer, Developer Advocacy
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Developer_Advocacy>
srodlund(a)wikimedia.org
Hi Everyone,
We’re happy to announce the January 2021 edition of the Technical Community
Newsletter
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Technical_Community_Newsletter/2021/January>
is now available. The newsletter is compiled by the Wikimedia Developer
Advocacy Team. It aims to share highlights, news, and information of
interest from and about the Wikimedia technical community.
Check it out, and learn about what technical contributors have been up to
this past quarter, upcoming conferences & calls for papers, and how to get
involved.
The Wikimedia Technical Community is large and diverse, and we know we
can't capture everything perfectly. We welcome your ideas for future
newsletters. Let us know what you would like to see or highlights you would
like us to include.
Subscribe to the Technical Community Newsletter
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Newsletter:Technical_Community_Newsletter>,
if you'd like to keep up with essential updates and information
Kindly,
Sarah R. Rodlund
Senior Technical Writer, Developer Advocacy
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Developer_Advocacy>
srodlund(a)wikimedia.org
Dear Community Member,
We are pleased to invite you to the first-ever Ghana Histo-Cita-thon on
Friday 27th November 2020, at the SSNIT Guest House. The evenT will
be happening from 9am to 2pm.
The Ghana Histo-Cita-Thon is a Wikicite event aimed at educating and
exposing members within the Wikimedia Movement to the benefits of using
books, journals, and newspapers in creating and improving Wikipedia
articles and Wikidata items.
The workshop will be followed by a month-long online contest that is
specifically focused on personalities and events that have significantly
contributed to the Ghanaian Independence story.
All participants attending the event will be given a certificate of
participation.
Kindly make your reservation by signing up here to join in person. [1] or
here to join virtually. [2]
Visit the link [3] below to learn more.
Regards,
Stephen Dakyi,
Project Lead, Ghana Histo Cita-thon
[1]- forms.gle/7dFbbdHa9xfCHpH38
[2]- forms.gle/8BUn6P7NvVA4VdMg6
[3]- meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Ghana_Histo_Cita-thon
Dear friends,
Apologies for cross-posting.
In 2020, one of the worst health and economic crises in a generation has
fuelled new hope for collaboration and openness—no one can confront these
challenges alone. Urgency demands even greater accountability and
transparency in machine decision making, data sharing, and privacy.
The call for proposals
<https://www.mozillafestival.org/en/get-involved/proposals/> for *MozFest
2021* is now open. We are inviting technologists, researchers, medics,
legislators, investors, and global citizens to launch, empower, discuss,
and celebrate projects and communities that keep collaboration,
transparency, and inclusion at their core.
For a healthy society and trustworthy AI, we need your voice, perspective,
and brainpower at the MozFest 2021 *Openness Space.*
Submit a session today
<https://www.mozillafestival.org/en/get-involved/proposals/>. Let's work
together at MozFest 2021!
Want to learn more? Please email me at sadik(a)mozillafestival.org
Best regards.
--
*Sadik Shahadu *
*MozFest Wrangler*
Mozilla Festival 2021 <https://www.mozillafestival.org/>
*Co-Founder *
Global Open Initiative
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Global_Open_Initiative>
*Regional Ambassador* (*Indigenous Communities*)
Art + Feminism Inc <https://www.artandfeminism.org/>
*Member*
Project Management Institute <http://www.pmi.org/>, Europeana network
association
<https://pro.europeana.eu/network-association/members?country=Ghana&domain=>
*Call/Whatsapp: +233244666136*
*Skype: Sadik Shahadu <https://secure.skype.com/portal/profile>*
*Twitter: @Sadike25 <https://twitter.com/Sadike25>*
*Yes, we can!*
Hello friends,
Wikidata is becoming too big to monitor individual data points
continuously. Additionally, keeping Wikidata’s data in sync with external
databases is hard and existing workflows are haphazard and one-off.
The Wikidata development team is interested in making it easier to compare
Wikidata’s data with other databases in order to flag mismatches so that
editors can more easily find and work on them.
We would love to talk to interested persons who've had some experience
working on reconciling mismatches between Wikidata and other databases, to
learn how you discover inconsistencies and the process you take to fix
them, to enable us to understand your needs in the context of your work. The
discussion will happen in English at a time depending on your availability.
If you’re interested in participating, please let me know and I will
contact you as soon as possible with the next steps. In case a call may be
difficult, we're also happy to receive your responses via text (I'll paste
the questions below).
Please don’t hesitate to reach out if you have any questions.
Thank you so much for your support,
--
*Questions:*
1. Would you like to give us an overview on how you work with the data
on Wikidata, specifically with a focus around comparing the data with other
databases?
2. How do you precisely detect the mismatches? Can you guide us through
the process? What kind of tools are you mainly using for comparing the data
or supporting your work in this area?
3. What are the valuable lessons that you learned or that you think we
should know about?
4. Given that there are many databases out there, how would you suggest
we prioritize and focus and why?
5. Is there any additional information (links, documentation, articles)
that you would like to share? Are there people/organizations that you would
suggest we reach out to?
--
Mohammed Sadat
*Community Communications Manager for Wikidata/Wikibase*
Wikimedia Deutschland e.V.
Tempelhofer Ufer 23-24
10963 Berlin
www.wikimedia.de
Hi Everyone,
We’re happy to announce the October 2020 edition of the Technical Community
Newsletter
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Technical_Community_Newsletter/2020/October>
is now available. The newsletter is compiled by the Wikimedia Developer
Advocacy Team. It aims to share highlights, news, and information of
interest from and about the Wikimedia technical community.
Check it out, and learn about what technical contributors have been up to
this past quarter, upcoming conferences & calls for papers, and how to get
involved.
The Wikimedia Technical Community is large and diverse, and we know we
can't capture everything perfectly. We welcome your ideas for future
newsletters. Let us know what you would like to see or highlights you would
like us to include.
Subscribe to the Technical Community Newsletter
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Newsletter:Technical_Community_Newsletter>,
if you'd like to keep up with essential updates and information
Kindly,
Sarah R. Rodlund
Senior Technical Writer, Developer Advocacy
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Developer_Advocacy>
srodlund(a)wikimedia.org
Hi Everyone,
We’re happy to announce the July 2020 edition of the Technical Community
Newsletter
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Technical_Community_Newsletter/2020/July>
is now available. The newsletter is compiled by the Wikimedia Developer
Advocacy Team. It aims to share highlights, news, and information of
interest from and about the Wikimedia technical community.
Check it out, and learn about what technical contributors have been up to
this past quarter, upcoming conferences & calls for papers, and how to get
involved.
The Wikimedia Technical Community is large and diverse, and we know we
can't capture everything perfectly. We welcome your ideas for future
newsletters. Let us know what you would like to see or highlights you would
like us to include.
Subscribe to the Technical Community Newsletter
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Newsletter:Technical_Community_Newsletter>,
if you'd like to keep up with essential updates and information.
Kindly,
Sarah R. Rodlund
Technical Writer, Developer Advocacy
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Developer_Advocacy>
srodlund(a)wikimedia.org