Just to remind you:
* India hackathon (18–20 November, Mumbai, India) — Alolita Sharma,
Siebrand Mazeland, Sumana Harihareswara and the local India team are
preparing for this event, which will focus on language, mobile and
offline support for MediaWiki content. You can register to request a
free invitation; approximately 100-125 attendees are expected.
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/India_Hackathon_2011
* Brighton hackathon (19–20 November, Brighton, England) — Free
registration is open for the general MediaWiki hackathon planned by
Lewis Cawte. You can register online. WMF engineers Antoine Musso, Roan
Kattouw, and Sam Reed plan to attend.
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Brighton_Hackathon_2011
--
Sumana Harihareswara
Volunteer Development Coordinator
Wikimedia Foundation
> "Carl (CBM)" <cbm.wikipedia at gmail.com> writes:
>
> > On Fri, Oct 21, 2011 at 12:15 PM, Mark A. Hershberger
> > <mhershberger at wikimedia.org> wrote:
> >> Posted this issue at <http://hexm.de/8m>.
> >
> > The above link is to :
> >
> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Village_pump_%28proposals%29#Does_Wi…
>
> As of this morning, I count 21 "support" and 25 "oppose".
>
> Part of the opposition was how I phrased it. Wikipedia obviously
> doesn't "need" a share button.
>
> I also didn't make it clear that I didn't think we should or would use
> any one else's "share" button since that would allow them to track their
> users through Wikipedia. As a result, I didn't count the one opposition
> that seemed primarily concerned with the tracking issue.
>
> Someone pointed to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:TheDJ/Sharebox and
> I tried it out, but it only worked after disabling the Firefox extension
> that I use to stop trackers. I'm glad TheDJ has made this available for
> those that want to use it, but I would like to get something else in
> place that doesn't share data with any intermediaries (such as
> AddThis.com) beyond the place that the user actually wants to share
> the page.
>
> Mark.
Making a share this link box is really trivial. There are several
implementations on different wikis (I wrote one at enwikinews -
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Template:Social_bookmarks . Commons used
to have one with stockphoto.js. Not sure if they still use it, several
other wikis do their own thing) The issue has always been if people
actually want it, which I believe is one of those discussions that
comes up over and over again on enwikipedia.
-bawolff
On Mon, Oct 31, 2011 at 11:47 AM, Siebrand Mazeland (WMF) <
smazeland(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
> Today the localisation team has had its first development showcase,
> something we hope to repeat every two weeks. Outside of three of our
> team members, one invitee was present (Robin Pepermans). A recording
> of the WebEx session is available at
> https://translatewiki.net/static/showcase/. Unfortunately it is not
> very easy (better: extremely difficult) to convert this into an open
> format, so you need a WebEx recording player to view it.
>
I've recorded it as a screencast and converted to Ogg Theora+Vorbis:
http://leuksman.com/misc/temp-vids/Localisation-team-showcase.ogv (149mb)
I was going to upload it to Commons or mediawiki.org, but it's over 100M so
the web upload form won't work. We really need that fixed. :)
-- brion
The Apple Lossless Audio Codec has been released under Apache license 2.0:
http://alac.macosforge.org/trac/wiki
Something to add to the Commons file format portfolio? Do we support
FLAC already?
I've been around a long time (2003) and have old accounts that I never use,
usually explicitly setup to prevent folks from creating accounts with
different capitalization for misleading user names in comments.
After SUL, that case variance problem should be handled correctly. But
those existing variants could still be re-activated.
Many of these accounts have expired email, so I don't see any notices.
Recently, one that has a current email sent me a notice that reads in
relevant part:
# Temporary password: YH2MnDD
#
# This temporary password will expire in 7 days.
# You should log in and choose a new password now. If someone else made this
# request, or if you have remembered your original password, and you no longer
# wish to change it, you may ignore this message and continue using your old
# password.
#
I use fairly long passwords with special characters (a 96 character set
including space). This replacement password is much more easily guessed.
The account could have been stolen within minutes or hours.
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Password_strength
(Merely 7 case insensitive alphanumeric characters is equivalent to only
40-bits of strength.)
Please update the password generator to use at least 17 characters, with
at least some punctuation! (Users reading the text might have trouble
noticing blanks, so don't use the space character.)
Of course, I know that various studies show that 12 to 15 characters
using a 95 character set are probably enough. And that's fine for the
user's choose. But this is an automatically generated replacement,
emailed out in the clear. It should be something stronger!
I am thinking about creating a very simple parser function #parse doing
nothing but returning parameter 1 with an "'noparse' => false" option.
Is there anything like this (or what could be abused for this) already
or is there any reason why this might be a bad idea?
The reason I want to have something like this is, I want to create a
template (for template and parser function black-box tests) accepting
something like {{((}}#somefunction:a{{!}}b{{!}}c{{))}} as parameter
value, showing {{#somefunction|a|b|c}} as output and at the same time
calling {{#parse: {{((}}#somefunction:a{{!}}b{{!}}c{{))}} }} so that
besides the definition also the result can be shown by the template output.
regards,
Daniel
(What follows is MediaWiki community stuff, not technical discussion,
offered in the interests of transparency and collaborative planning.)
TL;DR version: I don't think we can do Google Code-In well, so I don't
think we should apply to participate this year.
Since MediaWiki has participated in the Google Summer of Code mentorship
program, we have also received an offer to apply to participate in
Google Code-In, which runs Nov. 21 2011-Jan. 16 2011.
"Google Code-in is a contest for pre-university students (e.g., high
school and secondary school students) with the aim of encouraging young
people to participate in open source. We work with open source
organizations, each of whom will provide a list of tasks to be completed
by student contestants. Tasks can be anything a project needs help with,
from bug fixes to writing documentation to user experience research."
http://www.google-melange.com/gci/document/show/gci_program/google/gci2011/…https://code.google.com/p/google-code-in/wiki/GCIAdminMentorInformation
I have now gotten more information about what it's like to participate
in GCI, from organizations that have taken part in the past. And it
sounds like we just do not have the community capacity to do GCI this year.
* I can't take the time to develop the task lists or wrangle others to
do so by the deadlines (applying by 1 November, creating big task lists
by 21 November), due to other commitments (another volunteer
development/mentoring program, India hackathon 18-19 November, mentoring
existing new contributors). And I do not believe anyone else in the
MediaWiki community has the capacity to administer our participation
between now and mid-January, either. Tell me if I'm wrong!
* We'd need enough mentors on call to review the teenagers' assignments
as soon as they're submitted, so they aren't stuck waiting around before
they can grab a new task. This is for the whole two-month period,
including any winter holidays. Right now I do not think we can
satisfactorily guarantee that. We all have too much other work that
takes priority.
So: it's a cool idea, but I don't think we can do it well in the given
time period, so I'm turning it down. (Unless you want to run it, and
can guarantee some mentors' attention! In which case, tell me ASAP so
we can get an application in by 1 November.)
BUT: the number of participants we're getting in our Coding Challenge
(thanks, Greg!) means that if we want to do something like this
*ourselves* next year, on our timeline, we could probably get some
pretty good participation rates -- especially if we partner with
Wikimedia Foundation's Global Education Program. So let's come back to
this idea, perhaps sometime in the spring.
--
Sumana Harihareswara
Volunteer Development Coordinator
Wikimedia Foundation
Why.
Why does an encyclopedia need a share button? I can see the purpose on
Commons, but for an article? I just don't see the justification. What do you
really need to share with your friends from an reference source. What does a
button do that copypaste can't?
There's also the technical problems this would incur. Each of these buttons
require yet another HTTP request each, which would make the hard work by RL
team moot.
It just doesn't make sense.
On Oct 20, 2011 11:54 PM, <jidanni(a)jidanni.org> wrote:
Gentlemen, where is the Share button?
All other sites have them by now, but on Wikipedia one cannot even find
its definition in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Share .
At least on ones account preferences there should be a way to "activate
sharing with the following websites ... " causing a share button to
appear in the navigation menu.
If there is an extension, then wikipedia should install it and not
depend on browser plugins, etc.
OK, I made https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31853
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