On 6/9/06, Jesse W <jessw(a)netwood.net> wrote:
On Jun 9, 2006, at 4:32 PM, Steve Bennett wrote:
We have articles on every single episode of most
major TV shows, and
lots of
minor ones. You would never see that in any encyclopaedia.
You would not see that in the Encyclopedia of Late 20th Century
American Television? Really? Or do you mean in any "general"
encyclopedia. Because certainly, Wikipedia reaches the level of a
specialized encyclopedia in a number of areas, like television shows -
but (I hope), we don't go too much beyond that.
Out of curiosity, why?
Obviously storage space becomes a limit at some point, but there seems
to be little visible limit to the interest of people in documenting
things.
What, exactly, does an end-state Wikipedia project look like, to those
who would want us to stop adding new articles at some point? How and
when would you say "stop"?
--
-george william herbert
gherbert(a)retro.com / george.herbert(a)gmail.com