User talk:Invertzoo/Archive 87
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ARCHIVE PAGE 87: March 2015
Thanks for adding the entry.
Many prominent painters depicted this subject, could we rename the title tosomething that specifically references the particular author?Rococo1700 (talk) 12:55, 27 February 2015 (UTC)
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12:59, 27 February 2015 (UTC)
Sorry my bad. Rococo1700 (talk) 16:41, 1 March 2015 (UTC)
You mentioned you were looking for a fish expert. As I explained to the admins, I am originally from Portsmouth Virginia. I have done much volunteer work for a friend of mine which owns Coastal Harvest Fishing & Crabbing inc. I enjoyed fishing all of my life well into my adulthood and even still today. One thing I am familiar with among all things are the fish native to the Chesapeake bay, lol including their size & catch limits. I took this article on after finding the false information on the original article. The biggest issue I originally had was the inaccuracy on the name. They are really only known officially as Spot or Spot Fish, they have a nickname of the Norfolk Spot in VA. but in MD / VA / NC & SC they are only known as Spot. They are a type of drum fish, Google the following images, Puppy Drum, Red Drum, Black Drum, Drum & Spot fish, the spot is a much smaller fish than the drums it is only part of the family. Croaker are in that family as well but!!! Croakers are named Croaker for the specific reason that when you pull them out of water they croak. Check youtube you can find several videos of Croakers croaking. Notice they don't have spots, There are a couple types of Croakers and they are Atlantic & White Croakers. they have purple hues & a faint line across the side of their bodies.
Cheatspace (talk) 22:34, 28 February 2015 (UTC)
Please check out the following books from your local library.Fishes of Chesapeake Bay: A Guides to Freshtwater and Saltwater SpeciesSaltwater Fishes North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia: A Guide to Inshore and Offshore SpeciesKen Schultz's Field Guide to Saltwater FishThe Illustrated Guide to Marine Fish of the WorldEncyclopedia of Marine ScienceEncyclopedia of the Aquatic WorldEncyclopedia of Coastal ScienceNone of these books will you at all find the Spot(fish) referred to by or referenced as a croaker.
Also check out these 2 videos.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P447yPGN8wM - notice no sound coming from the fish.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtiPtWT9mnk - croaker(NOT A SPOT) croaking.Oh and so i am not called bias. https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=spot+croaking find 1 video showing a spot croaking(Unedited) I will donate $10,000 to Wikipedia and recant my article. All you will find are Atlantic & White Croakers.
Cheatspace (talk) 00:30, 1 March 2015 (UTC)
Looking at this article Fiona pinnata it has been repeatedly vandalised by a user at IP 107.3.74.36 since 2012. Can anything be done? BernardP (talk) 10:45, 4 March 2015 (UTC)
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Sunday March 22: Wikipedia Day NYC 2015 | |
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![]() ![]() You are invited to join us at Barnard College for Wikipedia Day NYC 2015, a Wikipedia celebration and mini-conference for the project's 14th birthday. In addition to the party, the event will be a participatory unconference, with plenary panels, lightning talks, and of course open space sessions. We also hope for the participation of our friends from the Free Culture movement and from educational and cultural institutions interested in developing free knowledge projects.
We especially encourage folks to add your 5-minute lightning talks to our roster, and otherwise join in the "open space" experience! Newcomers are very welcome! Bring your friends and colleagues! --Pharos (talk) 21:58, 9 March 2015 (UTC) |
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![]() | The Copyeditor's Barnstar | |
Thank you very much for your tireless and long term improving of articles! Snek01 (talk) 21:45, 10 March 2015 (UTC) |
Hi Susan! Long time. I hope you, User:JoJan, and User:Snek01 are well.
This image is going to be deleted unless I can find the source images. I'm not sure why I didn't list the others. It was a long time ago, and I was new.
Identified:
If you know the others, please say. I'd be very grateful.
All the best! :)
Anna Frodesiak (talk) 22:51, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
Convenience link: Commons:Commons:Deletion requests/File:Apogastropoda various 3.jpg
Anna Frodesiak (talk) 23:44, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
Anna Frodesiak (talk) 23:55, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
For this month's issue...
Making sense of a lot of data.
Work on our prototype will begin imminently. In the meantime, we have to understand what exactly we're working with. To this end, we generated a list of 71 WikiProjects, based on those brought up on our Stories page and those who had signed up for pilot testing. For those projects where people told stories, we coded statements within those stories to figure out what trends there were in these stories. This approach allowed us to figure out what Wikipedians thought of WikiProjects in a very organic way, with very little by way of a structure. (Compare this to a structured interview, where specific questions are asked and answered.) This analysis was done on 29 stories. Codes were generally classified as "benefits" (positive contributions made by a WikiProject to the editing experience) and "obstacles" (issues posed by WikiProjects, broadly speaking). Codes were generated as I went along, ensuring that codes were as close to the original data as possible. Duplicate appearances of a code for a given WikiProject were removed.
We found 52 "benefit" statements encoded and 34 "obstacle" statements. The most common benefit statement referring to the project's active discussion and participation, followed by statements referring to a project's capacity to guide editor activity, while the most common obstacles made reference to low participation and significant burdens on the part of the project maintainers and leaders. This gives us a sense of WikiProjects' big strength: they bring people together, and can be frustrating to editors when they fail to do so. Meanwhile, it is indeed very difficult to bring editors together on a common interest; in the absence of a highly motivated core of organizers, the technical infrastructure simply isn't there.
We wanted to pair this qualitative study with quantitative analysis of a WikiProject and its "universe" of pages, discussions, templates, and categories. To this end I wrote a script called ProjAnalysis which will, for a given WikiProject page (e.g. Wikipedia:WikiProject Star Trek) and WikiProject talk-page tag (e.g. Template:WikiProject Star Trek), will give you a list of usernames of people who edited within the WikiProject's space (the project page itself, its talk page, and subpages), and within the WikiProject's scope (the pages tagged by that WikiProject, excluding the WikiProject space pages). The output is an exhaustive list of usernames. We ran the script to analyze our test batch of WikiProjects for edits between March 1, 2014 and February 28, 2015, and we subjected them to further analysis to only include those who made 10+ edits to pages in the projects' scope, those who made 4+ edits to the projects' space, and those who made 10+ edits to pages in scope but not 4+ edits to pages in the projects' space. This latter metric gives us an idea of who is active in a certain subject area of Wikipedia, yet who isn't actively engaging on the WikiProject's pages. This information will help us prioritize WikiProjects for pilot testing, and the ProjAnalysis script in general may have future life as an application that can be used by Wikipedians to learn about who is in their community.
Complementing the above two studies are a design analysis, which summarizes the structure of the different WikiProject spaces in our test batch, and the comprehensive census of bots and tools used to maintain WikiProjects, which will be finished soon. With all of this information, we will have a game plan in place! We hope to begin working with specific WikiProjects soon.
As a couple of asides...
That's all for now. Thank you for subscribing! If you have any questions or comments, please share them with us.
Harej (talk) 01:44, 21 March 2015 (UTC)
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Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Wikipedia appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited Crassula aequilatera, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Reeve. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.
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