Luiz Augusto | 15 Jan 19:42
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Still wikipediocentric

Dear all,

I was the [[:m:User:555]], mainly active on the last years of my volunteers actions on Wikimedia Commons and Wikisource. I've left the Wikimedia projects mainly because the lack of energy from my side to keep trying to get free time to work in projects fully neglected by the Wikimedia staff, developers team and some volunteers in the core of the Foundaction acts.

A friend told me about the http://labs.wikimedia.beta.wmflabs.org/ . I've checked http://labs.wikimedia.beta.wmflabs.org/wiki/Special:SiteMatrix and... surprise! no Wikisource wikis with blue color links! I asked myself random things about the [[bug:21653]] lasted for 26 months until gets PARTIALLY fixed and decided to check some 'Recent changes' pages and found this:

http://pt.wikisource.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=233269

Come on guys! What is the point to run a bot spamming on all wikis if the tests are only to the Wikipedias? Attempt of a 'politically correct' action to these worse guys from others projects get's 'socially included'? Like in the real life, those worse guys aren't in need of assistencialism [1] actions...

Well, I don't expect any change on the Wikipediocentric actions in short, medium or long time (in fact the Foundation and some local chapters are trying to make things for the Wikimedia Commons project, but only because that project is the central media source for Wikipedias), this was only a mutter.

Despite my apparently hatred on this message, I really hope that the 3-4 extensions only enabled on Wikisources wikis don't get's any aditional bugs than the current ones in the new version of MediaWiki in the same intensity that your guys hopes that focusing in a project that only describes the knowledge in an encyclopedic way fully meets the http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Mission_statement

[1] - wow, a concept from social sciences yet not defined neither on en.wikpedia or en.wiktionary? O_O

As on all of my previous messages, sorry for my limited English skills. Best regards,

[[:m:User:555|Lugusto]]

billinghurst | 12 Jan 01:08
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Fwd: [Bug 21653] Creating a PDF with collection extension does not render the <pages> tag hook from proofread page extension

This looks like very good news.  We can but wait and maybe slightly ask to
see when it will be incorporated to WMF's mw rollout.

Regards, Andrew

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [Bug 21653] Creating a PDF with collection extension does not
render the <pages> tag hook from proofread page extension
Date: Wed, 11 Jan 2012 21:54:13 +0000
From: bugzilla-daemon@...
To: billinghurst@...

https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21653

Ralf Schmitt <ralf@...> changed:

           What    |Removed                     |Added
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Status|NEW                         |RESOLVED
         Resolution|                            |FIXED

--- Comment #16 from Ralf Schmitt <ralf@...> 2012-01-11 21:54:13
UTC ---
implemented in mwlib 0.13.2, which is already live on pdf cluster.

please report further issues on github:
https://github.com/pediapress/mwlib/issues/new

--

-- 
Configure bugmail: https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/userprefs.cgi?tab=email
------- You are receiving this mail because: -------
You voted for the bug.
You are on the CC list for the bug.

Marc Galli | 7 Jan 14:23
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Favicon

password

Thank for your help. Someone helped me on #wikimedia-tech, and the 
problem is solved.

Marc

Marc Galli | 6 Jan 13:30
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Favicon

password

Hi

I'm a sysop on French wikisource, I have lost my password and I have no email address to ask a new password.

Explanations here :

http://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Wikisource:Scriptorium#Mot_de_passe_perdu

I know it is possible to insert a new email address in the database, so I look for someone who can access to it.

Thank for your help.

Marc
Federico Leva (Nemo | 14 Dec 21:21
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Music module (LilyPond)

The WMF is working on it, there's some chance to get it deployed at 
last. Coders needed.
https://wikisource.org/wiki/Wikisource:Scriptorium#Music_module

Nemo

Philippe Beaudette | 4 Sep 06:33
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Personal Image Filter results announced



Ladies and Gentlemen,

The committee running the vote on the features for the Personal Image Filter have released their interim report and vote count.  You may see the results at http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image_filter_referendum/Results/en.  Please note that the results are not final: although the vote count is, and has been finalized, the analysis of comments is ongoing.

Posted on behalf of the committee,
Philippe
___________________
Philippe Beaudette
Head of Reader Relations
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.




Casey Brown | 1 Jul 21:55
Favicon
Gravatar

Call for image filter referendum

/Please distribute this message widely/

*Call for referendum*:  The Wikimedia Foundation, at the direction of
the Board of Trustees, will be holding a vote to determine whether
members of the community support the creation and usage of an opt-in
personal image filter, which would allow readers to voluntarily screen
particular types of images strictly for their own account.

Further details and educational materials will be available shortly.
The referendum is scheduled for 12-27 August, 2011, and will be
conducted on servers hosted by a neutral third party.  Referendum
details, officials, voting requirements, and supporting materials will
be posted at http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image_filter_referendum
shortly.

For the coordinating committee,
Philippe (WMF)
Cbrown1023
Risker
Mardetanha
PeterSymonds
Robert Harris

--

-- 
Casey Brown
Cbrown1023

Jyothis E | 11 Jun 19:01
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Announcement: Selected Books from Malayalam Wikisource on CD released

Dear fellow Wikimedians,


With great pleasure, Malayalam Wikimedia Community announced its 2011 CD project "Selected Books from Malayalam Wikisource on CD - 1.0" at the 4th annual Wiki Meetup in Kannur, Kerala. This is by far the biggest digital collection of free books in Malayalam language available on CD for offline use. This is an important milestone, as majority of the households in Kerala does not have internet or does not have an always on connection and this will enable them to access these books as an offline content.

Contents:

     Selected Poems by
          * Kumaranasan
          * Cherusseri
          * Changampuzha Krishna Pillai
          * Kalakkaththu Kunchan Nambiar
          * Irayimman Thampi
          * Ramapurathu Warrier

     Malayalam Grammer
          * Kerala Panineeyam by AR Rajaraja Varma

     Legends/Folklore
          * Aithihyamala

     Novels
          * Indulekha

     Religious
          * Bhagavad Gita
          * Adhyatma Ramayanam Kilippaatu
          * Harinama Keerthanam
          * Geetha Govindam
          * Sathya Veda Pusthakam (Malayalam Bible)
          * Quran
          * Works of Sree Narayana Guru
          * Devotional songs for Christian, Hindu and Islamic religions

      Native Art Form
          * Parichamuttukali pattukal

      Philosophy (Political)
          * Communist Manifesto
          * Principles of Communism (Friedrich Engels)
      
The CD also contains the commons collections of images on food, plants, birds, maps and  celebrations from Kerala. The CD is made available for download in iso format as well as browsing at our community website - http://www.mlwiki.in. For those who are interested in the technical challenges and aspects of the background work may read Santhosh's blog post about it. 

We thank every one who participated in the effort. Comments and questions are welcome.

Thanks and Regards,
Malayalam Wikimedia Community.
Philippe Beaudette | 5 Nov 01:37
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Fundraiser 2010: A memo to the community

A memo to Wikimedia community, friends, staff, and other stakeholders.

On Monday, November 15, we will launch the 2010 annual fundraising drive for the Wikimedia Foundation. As you know, our funding model relies on the support of our friends and community members. Our average donation is about $25, and we have received more than 500,000 donations in the lifetime of the foundation.  This year, we have to raise $16,000,000. That’s our biggest target yet, but it’s still only a tiny fraction of what the other top-ten websites spend on their operations. It’s critical that we reach our goal to maintain the infrastructure necessary to keep Wikipedia and its sister sites running smoothly.

We are a community that does great things, and does them routinely.  As we begin to bring this year's fundraiser to a close, we will launch our 10th Anniversary year!  It's hard to believe, isn't it?  What would the world be like, if the wiki hadn't launched?  If we hadn't jumped in to grow it?  If we hadn't financially supported it?  The world would be a far different -- and far more sad -- place, I think.  This 10th anniversary year provides an opportunity for reflection and introspection, but it also provides a chance to refocus: to plan, to build, to grow.  We've just completed the strategic planning initiative, and emerged with a cohesive, defined plan for the future growth and development of the Foundation, the projects, and the movement.  Now is the time.

So let's get going.

Since August, a team of dedicated staff members and volunteers has worked to develop the fundraiser for this year.  We committed early to radical and full disclosure of all the data we had, in keeping with the spirit of the transparent nature of the Wikimedia movement.  We quickly identified three major points in the donation process that were "levers" we could pull to optimize the process:  banner messaging, banner design, and landing/donation pages.   

Banner messaging:
Wikimedia fundraising has always been driven by site notices --  banners -- that run at the top of project websites. We’ve known for years that different banner messages drive different numbers of people to click through and donate. Therefore, this year we began the fundraiser by inviting community members to propose new banner messages for us to test.

Almost 900 people were involved in the creation and discussion of potential banner messages  We tested dozens of iterations of banner designs, including both graphical and text, and we will continue to do so.  

Many of the new banners did well. Unfortunately, none of them came anywhere near the 3% clickthrough rate of the winning banner from years past: “Please read: a personal appeal from Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales.”

But we’re going to keep trying. Our research indicates that banner wins because it is simple and direct with no attempt at marketing or manipulation. So we’re going to test, “A personal appeal from Wikimedia editor _____” and later in this memo, I’m going to invite you to be that editor and write an appeal for us to use in the fundraiser.

Banner design:
In our testing this year, we also quickly learned that graphical banners perform almost 100% better than text banners with the same message. Because of this, we will obviously be using more graphic heavy banners than we have in past campaigns.

Landing/donation pages:
Once a user clicks a banner, they land on a page that asks for a donation and provides payment options. We have spent a lot of time and energy optimizing those landing pages. Optimization of donation forms is an art and a science that involves messaging, graphic design, and usability research.

We will have iterated through roughly 40 different designs before landing on the ones that we'll launch with.  We are committed to encouraging people to beat us at our own game: we invite chapters and affiliated groups, organizations, and Wikimedians to create their own landing pages that they believe will work better than the ones we're running.  If we see some that are exciting, we'll test them, and run the ones that perform best!

In countries where there are Wikimedia chapters, the chapter has the option to create their own landing page to test along side the default. We hope that chapters will beat the default everywhere there is an attempt. In countries where there are no chapters, we’d like active Wikimedians to contact us about doing the same thing.

As we proceed through the campaign, we'll be constantly testing.  We'll test messages, banners, and landing pages.  We'll also test timing, and font size, and hundreds of other small variations.  But we're doing it all with an eye to integrity in data analysis, and an understanding of not only what the data tells us, but what it doesn't tell us.  Our decisions are grounded in fact and well reasoned theories: not hunches or educated guesses.

One thing is very different this year, though.  Once we hit our goal - and we will hit our goal - rather than immediately removing all banners, we're going to use some of the banner space (with a reduced banner size, frequency, and using targeted appeals) to ask people to contribute - not financially, but with their knowledge.  We will target readers, and encourage them to become editors.  It seems logical to us that this reader conversion effort should flow naturally from our fundraising campaign: both are forms of contribution.  We also believe that it will yield financial payoff in years to come by embedding new people deeply into our community and instilling them with our key values and an understanding of the greater mission.

This is an aggressive campaign.  It's an entirely achievable goal, however.  The only way to have it work, though, is to have full buy-in from the community.  Will you reach out to the people near you (either physically or virtually) and ask them to get involved?  Tweet that you donated.  Write a blog post about it.  Deliver four donations from friends with your own.  Help new users who make their first edit as part of the contribution campaign.

Here are some key things to know:
1)  On November 15, we will launch the fundraiser.
2)  You will begin to see banners consistently on the sites beginning on Friday, November 12 as we do full scale functional testing.
3)  This is a "contribution" campaign, celebrating all kinds of contribution.
4)  Our numbers are reasonable and attainable, but still a stretch.
5)  There will not be success without the full and active engagement of the community.

We've billed this as "the fundraiser you can edit", and it's true.  Community volunteers have been deeply embedded in our planning, including in all of our testing.  Community suggested messages were requested and tested.  We truly think of this as a fundraiser that is co-created by various parts of the community.  

There are still ways that you can participate directly, right now.  We’re going to test appeal letters from Wikimedia editors.  If you think you can write a letter that will beat Jimmy’s, please go to the meta page (http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fundraising_2010/TwoAsks/Write_An_Appeal) and sign up so we know to expect your letter.  You can also just send one to me by email:  donate-AeOJrEpdGNeGglJvpFV4uA@public.gmane.org.

I'm honored to be leading the effort this year, and ask you to join with me in making a contribution on the first day of the fundraiser.  

If you have any questions or comments, I'd love to hear them.  Please tell me what you think by writing to donate-AeOJrEpdGNeGglJvpFV4uA@public.gmane.org.

Best wishes,


Philippe


PS - for ease of linking, the full text of this memo is at http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fundraising_2010/Updates#4_November:_The_Schedule
_______________________
Philippe Beaudette
Head of Reader Relations
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.

pbeaudette-AeOJrEpdGNeGglJvpFV4uA@public.gmane.org

Imagine a world in which every human being can freely share 
in the sum of all knowledge.  Help us make it a reality!

Federico Leva (Nemo | 10 Oct 12:50
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[Fwd: Five-year WMF targets exclude non-Wikipedia projects]

I suppose this may interest you.
Sorry for crossposting; please join the discussion on foundation-l, if 
you wish.

Nemo

-------- Messaggio Originale  --------
Oggetto: Five-year WMF targets exclude non-Wikipedia projects
Data: Sun, 10 Oct 2010 12:33:07 +0200
Da: Federico Leva (Nemo)
A: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List <foundation-l@...>

Despite repeated assurances at Wikimania, on lists and on strategywiki,
that the strategic plan was going to consider all Wikimedia projects as
important, now at
http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Resolution:Five-year_targets the
second target, «Increase the amount of information we offer» considers
only the number of Wikipedia articles.
«We're aware of the challenges around bot-created articles, articles of
low quality, etc., and the limited focus on Wikipedia, so this metric
shouldn't be seen in isolation, but is an important indicator.» Yes, but
a wrong one.

I'm, very, very disappointed: I have to conclude that all the words on
community participation etc. were only empty rhetoric.

Nemo

Philippe Beaudette | 6 Oct 03:49
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Help Beat Jimmy! (The appeal, that is....)

Hi everyone,

I wanted to take a moment to bring you up to date on the planning of the 2010-2011 fundraiser, and ask once again for your participation in the process.  Our updated meta pages (http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fundraising_2010 ) will give you an overview as well.  There's a lot of information here, because we've made huge progress: I hope you'll take the time to read it and join in the planning for the fundraiser.

There's no doubt about it: the appeal from Jimmy Wales is a strong message.  We've tested it head-to-head against other banners, and the results [1] are unequivocal - especially when you also compare its performance last year and the year before.

But nobody wants to just put Jimmy up on the sites and leave him up for two months!

So we're issuing a challenge:  Find the banner that will beat Jimmy.

Data informed conclusions
Here's the trick:
We have to make our decisions based on the facts, not our instinct.  Please read the summaries below for really important details from our focus group and survey of past donors.

Focus Group
Wikimedia conducted a focus group of past donors in the New York City area in September 2010.  It's important to note that this was a single focus group, and in a single city.  We'll need to do more to make sure that results correlate universally.  But we came out of it with a few important take-away points.  It's important to realize that these points reflect ONLY donors - they should not be read as a wider feeling about mission or strategic direction - they're messaging points to help us refine and deliver the best messages possible.

** The most powerful image is of Wikipedia as a global community of people who freely share their knowledge and self-police the product.
For everyone who participated, the idea of a global community of people sharing knowledge that is accessible to anyone who wants it free of charge is incredibly powerful. Respondents in this group were highly unlikely to be editors themselves; most consider themselves users. They love the idea of the community and want to support it, but they are reluctant to put themselves out there by being more than a user and a donor.

** Keeping the projects ad-free is a powerful motivator.
Respondents were unanimous that keeping Wiki[m\p]edia ad free should be a priority, even if it meant that Wiki[m\p]edia would be approaching them for money more often.  Accepting paid ads could corrupt the values and discourage the free flow of information.

** Independence is critically important.
These respondents consume a lot of media, and they place a high premium on the free flow of information.  They have little patience for “sponsored” news or information that excludes other perspectives. The Wikimedia model of openness and community engagement facilitates that. 

** It’s a cause because it’s a tool.
This may sound a bit like a chicken/egg argument, but it’s actually an important nuance.  These folks use Wikimedia every day for things from simple curiosities to serious research. So it’s a tool that lets them get what they need. But it has grown to 17 million articles in 270 languages. Because it has that kind of depth and it reaches so many people around the world, it’s worth protecting what the community so successfully built. And that makes it a cause too.

** Growing isn’t always a good thing, when positioning for donors.
Like many tech savvy folks, our respondents are a suspicious lot. The idea of Wikimedia growing brings up concerns about what Wikimedia would become, and fears about the path of companies like Facebook. It’s not just a privacy concern; it’s a concern about what would happen to the democratic model of Wikimedia inside a growth strategy. Supporting the organic growth of the community doesn’t raise the same concerns. 

** Supporters strongly reject any agenda being attached to Wikimedia, even when that agenda would extend the current offerings.  
An agenda implies ownership, and respondents feel pretty strongly that the community owns Wikipedia. They think of Wikipedia as an organic thing, not like a typical nonprofit, and any attempt to steer it would disrupt that.  Community support is one of the key values, and not everyone in the community would support new initiatives. 

** There is room to fundraise more aggressively.
Across the board, respondents were surprised that they didn’t have the opportunity to give to Wikimedia more often. Obviously, there is a balance and a PBS-style solicitation schedule wouldn’t make sense both for Wikimedia’s personality and for this audience, but there is much more space available than we are taking. 

** Wikimedia donors are highly suspicious of marketing gimmicks.
Simple, direct messages are likely to work best. Jimmy’s message worked not so much because he was the founder, but because it was a simple plea for support delivered authentically. 

As we know, that’s something that also needs quantitative testing to prove. Sometimes donor response in a focus group and donor activity don’t line up exactly.  But, some things already line up with early tests. The more gimmicky the banner, the less likely it is to drive donations even if it increases clicks. 

Reaction to banners like “572 have donated in New York today” also raised concerns about privacy – not a good reaction in an already suspicious audience.  Appeals to “keep us growing” or that highlight a contributor’s work raise earlier concerns about an agenda.

Donor Survey Highlights
Wikimedia produced a random sample of 20,000 individuals from the much larger number of individuals, from many countries, contributing less than $1000 between November 1 2009 and June 30 2010. These individuals were invited to participate in a 29 item (but around 70 question) survey. 3760 agreed to participate, and the survey was conducted in August 2010. The participants probably differ from those who declined in ways that are associated with survey answers. Hence the respondents do not represent an entirely representative sample of the < $1000 donors.

The survey participants are committed to Wiki[p/m]edia, visiting it frequently. They say that they are very likely to donate again, and they support all the survey-mentioned reasons for donation. They were not aware of Wikipedia chapters. A majority of respondents did not appear greatly concerned about possible threats to Wikipedia’s identity.
About 1/3 of these individuals have edited, though not frequently. Those who express more support for Wikimedia as a cause appear more prone to edit. Those who have not contributed in this way say mostly that they haven’t thought about it--suggesting that they haven’t really considered the possibility—or that they don’t have time. Europeans and the highly educated especially stress lack of time.

Some subgroup differences were found within the sample. The likelihood of writing or editing does vary a bit by subgroup, for example. Overall, however, responses did not vary greatly by subgroup, whether “demographic” (nationality, education, sex) or behavioral (e.g., degree of on-line activity).

* The full details of the survey can be found at http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:FR_Donor_survey_report.pdf

Chapters
Chapters will receive the specifics of how we will work with them through their fundraising contacts which were designated on the fundraising survey, in order to keep the information communicated here to the essentials.

Testing
We have been testing for ten weeks now, and are really pleased with the progress that the tech team has made with new tools to support the fundraiser.  Geotargetting appears to work now, and we are currently testing a 1 step versus 2 step donation process.  We will have solid test results this week, we believe.  In all, we believe that we are - technically and message-wise - in a really good position.  We're working out kinks, definitely, but we're working them out before the fundraiser starts, so that we can maximize the dollar-earning potential of every day that we have banners up.

We need you
From the very beginning, Zack charged me with presenting the most collaborative fundraiser yet.  I'm thrilled at the level of involvement from the community, in everything from banner creation to testing structure, to design, to actually sitting on our test fundraisers with us in virtual conferences and being a full participating member of the team.  We're reporting out frequently, and trying very hard to engage with members of the community.  We have dedicated staff who are outreaching to our various language wikis in an attempt to get ever more broad participation.  I strongly encourage you to join in the discussions at the meta pages about the fundraiser:  /http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/FR2010.  Your involvement is not just appreciated - it's crucial.  

Thanks for sticking through this email - join us in discussion and help us beat the Jimmy appeal!

Thanks,
Philippe


____________________
Philippe Beaudette
Head of Reader Relations
Wikimedia Foundation


Imagine a world in which every human being can freely share in
the sum of all knowledge.  Help us make it a reality!

http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate


Gmane