I saw a lot medieval, renn, and gunpowder military articles on wiki today and then I thought about RAT's wikipedia task force.
In case you don't know they fix, improve and maintain roman related articles.
My proposal is that we form our own task force join wiki's military history task forces and then go to editing, unlike RAT however we'd be more focused on armour and weapons and like RAT we would post updates on our latest wiki updates and contribs here.
How does this sound?
I'd very much like to see a group of informed people take on such wikipedia entries updating, correcting, and maintaining them. A group of like-minded people with the same focus would allow you guys to do peer review and quality control as well. I'm all for it.
Over the years I've taken time to edit many entries to remove some of the really bad information that was present. I also attempted to remove a lot of myArmoury.com copyrighted materials from the site and have created original art for such entries as the schematic diagram of a sword's parts in the "sword" entry.
Over the years I've taken time to edit many entries to remove some of the really bad information that was present. I also attempted to remove a lot of myArmoury.com copyrighted materials from the site and have created original art for such entries as the schematic diagram of a sword's parts in the "sword" entry.
Sounds like a great idea!
I'm all for it!
I'm all for it!
Nathan Robinson wrote: |
I'd very much like to see a group of informed people take on such wikipedia entries updating, correcting, and maintaining them. A group of like-minded people with the same focus would allow you guys to do peer review and quality control as well. I'm all for it.
Over the years I've taken time to edit many entries to remove some of the really bad information that was present. I also attempted to remove a lot of myArmoury.com copyrighted materials from the site and have created original art for such entries as the schematic diagram of a sword's parts in the "sword" entry. |
Well since we got the bossman's permission it's a go :D
Ben P. wrote: |
Well since we got the bossman's permission it's a go :D |
Why would you need my permission to do something on somebody else's site? I have nothing to do with it.
Nathan Robinson wrote: | ||
Why would you need my permission to do something on somebody else's site? I have nothing to do with it. |
Well, you could still delete the thread, give warnings, etc.
Besides it's better to have permission and not need it than to need it and not have it. It's easier to ask permission than forgiveness ;)
In hindsight though I probably should have used blessing. . . Or just kept my shut ;)
Call it courtesy and respect in asking Nathan's opinion about it before doing it, rather than needing a formal permission. ;) :D :cool:
I think Nathan's point is that myArmoury staff/administrators don't have time to organize or administer this effort, but people are welcome to undertake this as they see fit. It won't officially be a "myArmoury" effort in principle or in name, though.
Chad Arnow wrote: |
I think Nathan's point is that myArmoury staff/administrators don't have time to organize or administer this effort, but people are welcome to undertake this as they see fit. It won't officially be a "myArmoury" effort in principle or in name, though. |
That's understandable and just fine and what you just described is what I had in mind
It's a good idea. Wikipedia is pretty user-friendly, and its easy to focus on a couple of areas in which one has particular expertise.
There's a dangerous discrepancy between the level of knowledge going into some of these sites and the amount they are used. Its scary how many university students are getting their knowledge from this source. We are even catching graduate students doing this. On the other hand, Professional academics seem disdainful or maybe just unaware how easy it is to do. I think that contributions are especially useful when one can provide references for the material provided, as in academic papers. It leaves a knowledge trail and nullifies the tendency to quibble over opinions.
I've expanded and monitored several sites related to my professional life (not historical arms). Someone might come along and mess around with it, but unless the new information is outright false I figure one has to go with the flow.
There's a dangerous discrepancy between the level of knowledge going into some of these sites and the amount they are used. Its scary how many university students are getting their knowledge from this source. We are even catching graduate students doing this. On the other hand, Professional academics seem disdainful or maybe just unaware how easy it is to do. I think that contributions are especially useful when one can provide references for the material provided, as in academic papers. It leaves a knowledge trail and nullifies the tendency to quibble over opinions.
I've expanded and monitored several sites related to my professional life (not historical arms). Someone might come along and mess around with it, but unless the new information is outright false I figure one has to go with the flow.
I'd like to point out that folks are also welcome to update and expand SwordWiki as well, which I had offered to host after a discussion on SFI. It still needs a lot of work, but the basic framework is in place.
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