LSS/wikipedia-l-archives/2006 11 26-12 16

2006
September October
39 4041424344
November December
45464748 49505152
2007
January February
12345 6789
Inactive March - June
July August
27282930 31323334
September October
3536373839 4041424344
November December
45464748 49505152

Translations English (en)

This is part of LSS, a mailing list summary service. It is a summary of wikipedia-l. Most posts whose authors are named have links to the full e-mail in the archive. However not every post is archived and the archive itself is so unstable that the urls will periodically be reassigned breaking the links in this summary. While edits to correct inaccuracies are welcome, changes to style or focus should first be discussed on the talk page. Decisions on whether to refer to people by their Wikipedia handle or their email name is arbitrary and may not be completely internally consistent. Some genders may be accidentally incorrect.Incorrect or not, this standard is used all around the net, for business or projects.


This issue covers (roughly) 2006 Nov 26-Dec 16

Threads edit

  • [1]Andrew Engels gave a link to a list he updated on articles that have several interwiki links but are missing a few languages.
  • [2][3]The Cunctator noted that in a panel discussion in New York City, Daniel Mayer was (incorrectly) listed as being a co-founder of Wikipedia.
  • [4]Michael Snow noted that the Russian Wikipedia had a notice on their Front Page that they had received a UNESCO-related national award for education and science.
  • [5]Tim Starling noted that new static HTML dumps of Wikipedia were available.
  • [6]Andre Engels reported that according to a recent study, Wikipedia is the tenth most popular website in the Netherlands.
  • [7]Danutz asserted that Yann had made abusive edits on the moldovan Wikipedia. GerardM spoke in support of the edits, noting that the language subcommittee would benefit from normalisation. Discussion followed on language issues and some of the efforts of that committee.
  • [8]Magnus Manske noted that Lawrence Lessig has released the second edition of his book, "Code", and that it was publicly available.