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User talk:Simetrical: Difference between revisions

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See also ]. {{Macross|state=}}al/Archive]]


== Re: [[Tempee
=='''WHAT DOES NOT BELONG HERE'''==
You asked me to unprotect the template so you could make some changes to it. Just reminding you that I did reduce it to semi-protection, so whenever you get around to making your changes... Later. — <small>Jul. 1, '06</small><tt> ''' <<u class=plainlinks>&#124;</u>>'''</tt>
#Anything related to something on another talk page. Don't split discussion across multiple talk pages, please, it's just confusing.
#Thanking me for supporting you in some discussion/vote or other. It's a bit annoying to see that "you have new messages" thing all the time for things that aren't really substantive. So let me preemptively say, you're welcome.


== Editing of "Colgate University" page ==
__TOC__


I received a message from you that I edited the Colgate University page, and the edit was vandalism. I must let you know, however, that I was incorrectly identified through the IP address. All computers on the Colgate networked are masked under a small number (less than 10) IP addresses, so it could have been any other of the 3500 computer users on this campus. Not your fault, but I just wanted to let you know.
==Copyright abuses==
Hello, I see you have had problems with Ta bu shi da yu before. '''Tens of thousands''' of images have been deleted by a small handful of wikipedians, citing "fair use".


== "Custom TOCs" ==
Would you be interested in joining a group on[REDACTED] which counters the heavy handed tactics of the copyright police. We can't fight them on my own. ] has began deleting fair use image on every person's user page and on several other pages, inspired by ] which was written by another paternal copyright policeman with '''absolutly no legal training''' and little understanding of copyright law. ] created the ] page and was responsible for deleting hundreds of Time magazine covers and refused to stop even after Time magazine sent an e-mail allowing[REDACTED] to use the images.


Hello, the law page looks a bit odd with a long blank space, because there's a short introduction and lots of content categories. Surely that counts as a good reason to deviate from the wikimanual you referred to when responding to the other person's complaint about this in August. I imagine wikimanuals are there for guidance on the more wild and undeveloped pages, where people fiddle with the style all the time and do little with substance. Best wishes. ]
We stared this page, with this purpose: ]


== editsection stylesheet ==
'''Please''' tell others about this project. The paternal copyright police are well organized and are intoxicated with their own trival power here on wikipedia. Like most authoritarian personalities, these misguided copyright fanatics have finally have overstepped the bounds of good sense and restraint, when they began deleting tens of thousands images from wikiusers' pages. Only a large number of wikipedians will stop this abuse. ] 13:45, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
:If you had done a little more research, you would discover that I'm no opponent of the fair-use policy. I would qualify as one of the "copyright police" myself, quite likely, although I'm not as hard-line as someone like Gmaxwell and I don't have the ability to delete anything. And while I'm not sure I'm a great fan of TBSDY, I don't disagree with the spirit of his copyright-related deletions.<p>Removing fair-use images from user pages is probably a good policy, except maybe for some purely promotional images (like, is Mozilla going to object if someone has a Firefox logo in their profile? they ''encourage'' people to use promo banners with their logos). Not many images in the user space would qualify as fair use, since user pages mostly aren't for any of the purposes fair use is meant to cover (research, education, commentary, etc.), and there's no point having to argue about whether any given picture meets the fair-use case when user space is supposed to be ancillary to the project.<p>Finally, with respect to the ''Time'' magazine covers, you correctly observe that our fair-use policies are mostly user-authored, but the policy that images licensed only for use by Misplaced Pages have to be deleted is due to the unrelated question of the GFDL. Licenses that restrict redistribution of Misplaced Pages content are unacceptable—otherwise, why bother with the GFDL at all? —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 00:31, 18 May 2006 (UTC)


Hello, I've investigated a problem with the display of the links (next to the title of each paragraph) when there is more than one object (usually image) with "float" parameter in the preceding paragraph. In this case (using FF) the link does not appear on the same height as the title of the paragraph - but on the same height as the lowest floating preceding object - which apparently is the exact behavior specified in CSS 2.0. I think I have a solution, and I came to talk to you about it in advise of ] on the Hebrew[REDACTED] - who said you take care of this aspect. The solution is pretty simple, instead of having the editsection CSS (on /skins-1.5/common/shared.css) defined as -
==There are so many countries in Europe...==
.editsection {
Thank you for trying to find a solution for the ] issue. May I suggest that regulations of Romania have no effect on Hungarian copyright issues. Regards, --] 08:23, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
float: right;
:Thank you, I am a moron. x_X —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 17:53, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
margin-left: 5px;
}
set it to -
.editsection {
display: block;
text-align: right;
position: relative;
}
("text-align: left;" on RTL projects). In this setup the link would always be in-line with the paragraph title, and lined to the top of the title - this works good on FF, and IE as far as I've checked, so if there are nothing I've missed I don't see a reason why not to replace it. תודה, ] (]) 20:27, 4 January 2008 (UTC)
:This was tried, I reversed it. I observed distinctly different appearance in other browsers (e.g., old versions of IE). Specifically, it shifts up by somewhat different amounts in different browsers, whatever you shift it up by. (I assume you left out the "top: 1.2em" or similar statement.) For discussion of the issue, you can read ]. I do plan to fix this, the question is only when. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 04:27, 6 January 2008 (UTC)


== ] ==
== pseudomathematics, what do you think of speedy deletion as non-notable. ==
...to the next ]!


{| class="infobox" style="width:250px"
Even though I made most of the recent "improvements" to ], the term doesn't seem to be in use at all except as an ad-hoc term of derision, and this Misplaced Pages entry is the first hit on pseudomathematics, not because the article is so often linked (only one link to it from a domain other than Misplaced Pages! See for yourself: ), but because Misplaced Pages is the only site of any size that mentions the term!
|-
Especially the "categorizations" of pseudomathematicians in the article are original research. I think the term is non-notable, and again, even though I recently thought to improve it with my edits, I now think deletion is preferable. Indeed, there are only 21 uses of the word "pseudomathematics" on every .edu site on the Internet:
| ]
, so that it certainly isn't a term in real academic use.
|''']'''
<br/>Next: ''']'''
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In the morning, there are exciting plans for a behind-the-scenes guided tour of the ].


In the afternoon, we will hold a session dedicated to discussing ] issues (see the ]).
I welcome your thoughts.


In the evening, we'll share dinner and chat at a local restaurant, and (weather permitting) hold a late-night astronomy event at Columbia's telescopes.
] 23:11, 23 May 2006 (UTC)


You can add or remove your name from the New York City Meetups invite list at ].<br /><small>This has been an automated delivery by ] (]) 01:29, 5 January 2008 (UTC)</small>
:Certainly we need an article on crank mathematics. Possibly a better term could be found, though, and certainly much of the existing stuff could use sources. Speedy deletion (or deletion at all) is unwarranted, IMO. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 23:22, 23 May 2006 (UTC)


== Revision when rollbacker was implemented ==
:: Well, I agree that an encyclopedia should ''certainly'' convey to someone the difference between real mathematics and pseudomathematics. However, it is not appropriate for us to invent a term to put this distinction under, and I have even more shocking news than in my above post: Googling "pseudomathematics" returns 9,770 hits, but googling "pseudomathematics -wikipedia" returns only 681 hits! (By comparison, a random word "pseudointelligent" returns 2,980 hits, which all seem to be someone making it up on the spot).


Hi there. Hope the little debate we had yesterday wasn't too exhausting! :-) I was wondering if you would be able to point me towards the actual revision that implemented rollbacker? The impression I get from the "shell" stuff is that the switch is in some en-wiki specific thing, and that globally (for all the projects) the ability to turn on this new user right was available earlier. One of the points (I think) is that this software change wasn't available at the time of the earlier poll. I do remember seeing some talk somewhere about how some clunky patch that was used to change user rights had been made redundant by some change - was it this change that also allowed the rollbacker thing to go ahead? Any pointers would be much appreciated. ] (]) 13:22, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
:: Please google "pseudomathematics -wikipedia" and look at the results, then try adding "pseudo" to some random words of your choice, and see how you get more results on non-existent terms! (Since pseudo, of course, is somewhat generative in our language, like semi-). "We need an article" is no reason for an article title that is all original research, since the term is not used (except in an ad-hoc way, like my saying something about a pseudoSimetrical edit, to talk about an edit that's not really "you".)
:There are two separate concepts here that a lot of people get confused. One type of access you can have is to commit changes to the ] repository. This repository contains almost all the code used for running the site. Changes made here do not take effect immediately. Users with just commit access cannot do anything at all to the servers by themselves.<p>The other type of access you can have is ], i.e., more or less full access to the servers (possibly restricted somewhat so that you can't seriously disrupt the system). Shell users can run programs and store files and so on on the servers if they want, but the more relevant thing is that they are given the permission to change various configuration settings, they can update the code that's running on the servers to the latest version from Subversion (or any other version), and some (maybe all, I don't know, but at least all the roots) have direct access to the database. These things are ''not'' kept in Subversion, can''not'' be changed by people with only commit access, and are ''not'' publicly viewable. Therefore there is no revision to link you to.<p>I refer to developers and sysadmins separately, by the way, because the two groups are not only quite different in their rights, but they don't fully overlap. Sysadmins like JeLuF may have commit access, but in practice they never use it. They might not be familiar with the MediaWiki code, they might not even be familiar with programming at all beyond simple scripts. They therefore can't add new features to the software, and perhaps more importantly, they can't review things like new extensions. The two main sysadmins who are also developers are Brion Vibber and Tim Starling. (Other active or semi-active sysadmins can also write code, like Domas and River, but they don't presently tend to add new features to the software, or review them.)<p>As for the software change: up until a few months ago, there was no reasonable way for user-rights assignment to be given out on a modular basis. Either you were a steward and could change all rights however you wanted on ], or you could change nothing. When, in days of yore, it was perceived this was a little inflexible, someone coded up a totally different page, ], and gave it a special right so that bureaucrats could use it. Later, stewards were having to field an excessive number of bot addition/removal requests, and there was quite a bit of lag involved (this was true until maybe a year ago, I think), and so Rob Church coded up yet another entirely different special page, ]. What this meant is that if you wanted to create a rollbacker group, you would have to get a developer to write an entire extension for you, and it would have to be checked over and enabled by one of the two active developer/sysadmins I mentioned for reasonableness.<p>So several months ago, I changed ] so any group could be easily configured to have limited access to it, for instance only to grant sysop, bureaucrat, and bot and to remove bot. None of the sysadmins used it that I know of, however, until a short while ago, when ] improved it further (by adjusting interwiki rights-granting, etc.). Now it is possible for any group to be given the right to add or remove any other group, and quite a few long-standing shell requests can be fulfilled (plus Makesysop and Makebot will be obsoleted once the Userrights interface is cleaned up a bit more). So when this was previously discussed, no, it could not have been implemented. It's only possible within the past few weeks. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 19:06, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
::Wow! Thanks for all that. I feel like I know how things work around here now! :-) I knew some of this already, but some of it I didn't know, or had forgotten. You may not be aware, but Doc Glasgow (following a suggestion by Jimbo) has filed an arbitration case to clear up the issue of consensus. I'm not sure how clued-up the Arbitration Committee are on what you just said above, so maybe you might want to post something over at ] to provide the background? Just add a statement and type away (not sure if you know how that system works). ] (]) 01:47, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
:::I have participated in ArbCom proceedings before on occasion. I imagine that there are people on the ArbCom who understand well enough how things work, and if not I'm sure they'll have the sense to ask if they're unsure. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 17:59, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


==Request for comment on main page deletion incident==
:: '''At a minimum, can we agree that''' however nice it is to have Misplaced Pages leave the reader (somewhere, as it does already on the mathematics page) with a sense of the difference between real mathematics and crank mathematics (a term which also doesn't exist much online), '''using what amounts to a neologism is not appropriate.'''


As you made an edit to the incident listed in the Administrators notice board, it is requested that you confirm the details of the incident ]
:: Where to put the article is another question. Can we agree on this first question?


This is as the incident is used as the basis of an argument and needs to be confirm by persons familar with the event
:: Here are the sources I mentioned:
::
::


Regards --] ] 2008-02-22 <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 07:57, 22 February 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:: Go ahead and try using "pseudo" in a generative way, pseudointelligent, pseudobiological, pseudosexual, pseudoencyclopedic, pseudo- anything. It's a generative root in English, and my unabridged paper dictionary even has a listing, without comment, of all the pseudo- words that are actually in wide use (it doesn't include pseudomathematics). HOWEVER, if there's no special meaning to a pseudoterm (any one of the ad-hoc terms I mentioned in this paragraph return more appropriate hits) then it's not appropriate to do original research on it! Agree? :)


==New mailing list==
:: ] 10:08, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
There has been a mailing list created for Wikipedians in the ] (list: ]). Please consider joining it! ''']''' '''<small>]</small>''' 21:39, 22 February 2008 (UTC)


==You are invited!==
:::Yes, yes, I agree with all that. The article should be moved somewhere appropriate, if a better name can be found. What would you suggest, however? ]? The phenomenon is certainly real enough (people claiming to have squared the circle, etc.), and it deserves an article (although the current one needs more sources). —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 19:58, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
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In the afternoon, we will hold a session dedicated to ] activities, and have salon-style group discussions on Misplaced Pages and the other Wikimedia projects (see the ]).


Well also make preparations for our exciting ''''']''''' event, a free content photography contest for Columbia University students planned for Friday March 28 (about 2 weeks after our meeting).
== Republishing Magazine Lists ==


In the evening, we'll share dinner and chat at a local restaurant, and (weather permitting) hold a late-night astronomy event at Columbia's telescopes.
Thanks for your response on the copyright board about republishing magazine lists. Is there a particular written guideline you could point me to in case I come across other problem articles? Thanks. --] (]) 12:49, 24 May 2006 (UTC)


You can add or remove your name from the New York City Meetups invite list at ].
:The basic rules are 1) don't violate copyright law, and 2) don't include anything that can't be licensed under the GFDL (or a compatible license) except for a) fair use and b) freer-than-GFDL things (public domain, BSD-style licenses, etc.). Point 1 is the tricky part, with reams of legal cases to consider; it's based on legal precedent that I say lists are copyrightable (I could come up with case names if you're interested).<p>The pages on copyright are at ] and various pages linked from there (such as ]). —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 20:05, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
::Thanks. --] (]) 20:10, 24 May 2006 (UTC)


You're also invited to subscribe to the public , which is a great way to receive timely updates.<br /><small>This has been an automated delivery because you were on ]. ] (]) 03:32, 4 March 2008 (UTC)</small>
== RoE movie poster ==


== Discovered attack ==
Thanks for the help! ] 05:35, 28 May 2006 (UTC)


The convention that the Chess Wikiproject uses is to put the "chess notation" tag at the top of the article. ] ], 15:32, 17 April 2008 (UTC)
== Why was my drawing deleted? ==


== On refs with missing closing tags ==
The drawing that was deleted was drawn by me using colored pencil and watercolor.


''The literal string "&lt;ref>" could legitimately occur in a reference's text.''{{fact}} --] (]) 03:37, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
It was modeled after the picture you refer to indeed. But I dont think that is a problem, as mine has obvious differences from the original. Just like the ] drawings were modeled off of ]: See here:
:I didn't say it was probable on the English Misplaced Pages. There's no intrinsic reason it's nonsensical, however. It might be worthwhile to assume it's not intended, however, since it seems to be much more likely in most circumstances that you left off the ending tag, I agree. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 16:04, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
::Well, the other thing is, there's a difference between &lt;ref> showing up unescaped, and &amp;lt;ref&amp;gt; - and since you '''can't''' have references within references (arguably a bug), you should really be using the latter anyway. --] (]) 16:20, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
:::Yes, that's true. If &lt;nowiki>, &lt;pre>, and entity escaping all worked to avoid the error message, it would probably be fine. I even once wrote a patch to that effect and attached it to a bug somewhere, before I got commit access. It might still work today (but probably not, with the addition of groups). —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 17:14, 24 April 2008 (UTC)


== TfD nomination of ] ==
Please restore my drawing back. It took me a week to draw it. I'd like to have it displayed. And we can say who I modeled the drawing after in the caption. That should leave no doubts I'd say.--] 21:55, 29 May 2006 (UTC)
] has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at ]. Thank you.<!--Template:Tfdnotice--> — ] (]) 08:01, 15 May 2008 (UTC)


== NYC Meetup: ] ==
:First of all, I would like to note that I wasn't the one who deleted your image; according to , it was ] who did it. Second of all, I did advocate its deletion, and I regret that your work has to be wasted.<p>However. Under US copyright law, while your work is an act of creativity, and thus no one can use it without your permission, it's ''also'' based off of ''another'' person's creative work, and thus no one can use it without ''their'' permission either. While Misplaced Pages is noncommercial, we're dedicated to making our content ]—that means that people can reproduce it, even commercially, and that extends to userpages. (This stipulation allows more effective distribution of works; for instance, consider the reliability of for-profit mirrors such as as compared to Wikimedia servers, and realize that a paper version, say, would have to be distributed for a fee to cover costs.) As such, noncommerciality cannot be used as a defense.<p>The fact remains that in all likelihood, the creator of the base character (whose identity you didn't mention anywhere, I don't think) would probably be okay with you hosting the image on your non-profit website. He/she would quite likely not be okay with commercial sites hosting it, for money. Therefore, I would suggest that you use a personal website service such as ] to host your image so that others can see it (you do have a copy somewhere, right?). Misplaced Pages, unfortunately, cannot host it for you. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 23:04, 29 May 2006 (UTC)
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In the afternoon, we will hold a session dedicated to ] activities, ''']''', and hold salon-style group discussions on Misplaced Pages and the other Wikimedia projects (see the ]).


We'll also review our recent ] event, and make preparations for our exciting successor ''''']''''' bonanza, being planned with Columbia University students for September or October.
==Rfc==
Rfc is not necessary if the case has been throughly discussed on AN/I and remains unresolved. It says something about this (I think it is still there) at the top of AN/I page. Don't bring the question to both places or something like that. ] ] 03:15, 31 May 2006 (UTC)


In the evening, we'll share dinner and chat at a local restaurant, and (weather permitting) hold a late-night astronomy event at Columbia's telescopes.
:I started on the RFC, but then decided to wait to see what others think. I think RFC is a better place for the dispute than AN/I, personally, but if the ArbCom accepts the case, it would probably be superfluous. I'll wait for what the ArbCom says, personally. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 03:17, 31 May 2006 (UTC)


You can add or remove your name from the New York City Meetups invite list at ].
==]==
Hello,


Also, check out our regional US Wikimedia chapters blog (and we're open to guest posts).<br /><small>This has been an automated delivery by ] (]) 00:39, 20 May 2008 (UTC)</small>
An Arbitration case in which you commented has been opened: ]. Please add evidence to the evidence sub-page, ]. You may also contribute to the case on the workshop sub-page, ].


==wikibits.js==
On behalf of the Arbitration Committee, --] 00:32, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
There are several proposals for changes to wikibits.js, ]. Could you offer some guidance on how best to prepare the proposals for submission to bugzilla? Thanks! ] (]) 21:48, 18 August 2008 (UTC)


File one bug per issue. Make sure patches are in ] format against the current version of wikibits.js. Ideally, prepare patches by checking out a copy of MediaWiki (or just phase3/skins/common/ if you like) and using the command "svn diff", or "Create patch" (something like that) in TortoiseSVN. Attach the patch to the bug report, and give an explanation of what it does and why in the report itself. If you want to commit performance improvements, make sure you know that they're actually a performance improvement. Set the "assignee" to Sim<span>etrical+w</span>ikibugs<span>@</span>gmail.com. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 23:21, 18 August 2008 (UTC)
== -Barry- ==
:If I submit them all at today will it cause problems? I mean, will the software be able to apply several patches that all branch from the same, initial version? Or, should I wait until the first patch has been accepted before submitting the next? ] (]) 00:59, 19 August 2008 (UTC)
::As long as multiple patches don't change the same lines of code, or immediately adjacent ones, they should apply cleanly. If two changes do change the same lines of code, consider submitting them as one patch in one bug report, even if they're unrelated. Alternatively, just submit them separately, it shouldn't be hard to manually resolve any conflicts. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 15:21, 19 August 2008 (UTC)
:::OK, thanks. ] (]) 16:52, 20 August 2008 (UTC)


== nstab-main ==
I'm frankly, stunned by your response to my RfC for -Barry-. I've been a fairly long-time contributor to Misplaced Pages, and I've never initiated an RfC before. In this one case, a user has come along to an existing page that was already listed as a Good Article; disrupted it to the point that over a half dozen other editors complained about his conduct (some uncivily, I'll note with a fair amount of shame, though I always tried to keep it civil, myself); and then he de-listed the article form the Good Article list. At the point that he then admitted that he had a long and very heated relationship with the community surrounding the topic, I just gave up.


Hey, could you take a look at the discussion at ] and tell us what you think? —] <sup>(])</sup> 06:11, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Due to your response, I'm left with the feeling that this is considered acceptable behavior. How can that be? How can the input of so many other editors be cast aside so quickly? Why is it that one person with a long history of disruption of things related to a topic can hijack the presentation of the topic on Misplaced Pages? -] 14:27, 2 June 2006 (UTC)


Alright, if you're not interested in the discussion that's fine. Would you consider taking a look at ], at least? I made a patch to fix the issue, but no one has looked at it. —] <sup>(])</sup> 20:55, 12 September 2008 (UTC)
:I considered the evidence carefully, and that's the conclusion I came up with. I'm only one person; I could be wrong. From what I've seen, I think that you're misperceiving the situation ''because'' he's in a minority. I could see no evidence of substantially disruptive behavior on his part, quite simply.<p>For what it's worth, I got burned a lot worse than this on ]. ;) —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 02:33, 4 June 2006 (UTC)


Go to BetaWiki or someplace and talk to the Spanish and French translators. I don't know either language and am not going to commit changes to their localizations. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 21:10, 12 September 2008 (UTC)
== BA RFAr evidence ==


:Thanks for pointing me in the right direction! I see you've beaten me to closing ], so thanks doubly. —] <sup>(])</sup> 23:14, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
FYI, the "Ben" that you refer to at WR is almost certain banned editor ]. ] 20:03, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
::I didn't close it, Siebrand did. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 00:15, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
:::Whoops. You're right. Thanks anyway. —] <sup>(])</sup> 23:29, 15 September 2008 (UTC)


== Your evidence == == Category counts ==


In re ], your patch r40499 is live now and works good. I was able to view my test page and watch the cat counts get corrected (with some judicious null-edits). At least, it sure seems that way!
Hi, Simetrical, as far as possible, can you try, when giving evidence, not to link to anything that might lead to further damage to a victim of harassment? I know it might be hard to decide where to draw the line, and I know one could argue that the damage has ''already'' been done; but if you weigh up how necessary a particular piece of evidence is, whether other links supplied can sufficiently verify the truth of a statement without it, and what likelihood there is of causing further harm or distress to someone, you should be able to make a good decision. Generally, anything that gives the real name and/or contact details of an editor who has tried to remain anonymous should not be posted on Misplaced Pages. Thanks. ] ] 21:22, 2 June 2006 (UTC)


Did you go any further with the idea of a job to recount all categories? That seemed like a strictly server-side function, which is certainly beyond my scope. Seems like a good idea though... ] (]) 01:25, 24 September 2008 (UTC)
:If absolutely needed for the case, the information can be sent by email to the artbitrators (and other parties on a need to know basis.) --] ] 21:30, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
:You shouldn't need null edits. Just viewing the category page should do it. As for the job, really all that would be needed is for the sysadmins to regularly run populateCategory.php with a very low value of maxlag and/or a high throttle (and with --force so it repopulates even though the table is populated already). The script's already there, but I can't make it run, since I only have commit access, not shell access. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 14:15, 24 September 2008 (UTC)
::Thanks! Viewing the cat page (I'm confident) updates the DB table. It seemed as though the null edits were needed to force an update on the page containing the PAGESINCATEGORY parser function. Would your count-update patch force updates onto the job queue for pages containing the parser function? I'm guessing no, since I don't see any way to obtain backlinks for parser functions - so it seems to me, the function-containing page will remain static. Though I'm now confused - if PIC is on a page, does that mean the page is dynamically regenerated every time it's accessed?
::I did see a bit of tricky code UltraExactZZ uses to force an update on rendering his ], see "fullurl:Category:Spam pages for speedy deletion|action=purge" therein - but I'm still confused on whether the page is dynamically rendered - does this mean UE's page never hits cache, by virtue of the PAGESINCAT function?
::My confusion aside, who would be a good admin to push about setting up the job you describe? At least getting a one-time run? I see Brion has had only 17 or so server crashes to deal with in the last few days, would that be the first stop?
::And I may try to update some doc's to reflect the latest changes - would you like to see diff's of same? ] (]) 00:21, 25 September 2008 (UTC)
:::PAGESINCATEGORY just isn't updated until the page is reparsed. There are no backlinks, as you point out, so it's not possible to figure out which pages to regenerate on update; even if it were, invalidating the parser cache of bajillions of pages every time something is added to/removed from a category isn't really acceptable. The parser function is always going to be lagged, possibly by days, so it's not really useful for fine-grained tracking. For that purpose, visit the category page, or use a script.<p>You might try talking to Brion or Tim if you want the script run, I suppose. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 01:09, 25 September 2008 (UTC)


== TfD nomination of ] ==
:Good point. I hadn't thought of that, I'm afraid. I've removed the last vestiges of the links from my post, but of course they're still in history. Until ] becomes rather more sophisticated, I'm afraid it would be tricky to remove the info from page history. I'll ask, though. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 02:07, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
] has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at ]. Thank you.<!--Template:Tfdnotice--> ''''']]]''''' @076, i.e. 00:49, 3 December 2008 (UTC)


== Quaternions / finite dimensional division rings ==
== Perl ==


Regarding your recent edit to ], I'm wondering whether I'm understanding it correctly; maybe it's just a terminology issue, but since ]s, quaternions, and complex numbers all have the reals as proper subrings, there should be three division rings (and not two, per your edit)? Thanks, Jens ] (]) 02:30, 15 December 2008 (UTC)
Heh. You got so much wrong in your analysis. Writing this here because I see no place to respond on ].
:Ah - just noticed that associativity of multiplication is typically part of a ring. Never mind. Thanks, Jens ] (]) 02:38, 15 December 2008 (UTC)
::I just asked "so what are the other two?" when I read that sentence, clicked through to ], and added the one other nontrivial one listed there. Unless I'm grossly misunderstanding that article, if I'm wrong then it's wrong too. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 02:44, 15 December 2008 (UTC)
:::Hi - the Frobenius theorem article is correct, it applies to ''associative'' division algebras. The octonions, in contrast, are a non-associative, finite-dimensional division algebra; and as I read here in Misplaced Pages, associativity of multiplication is typically included in the definition of a "ring", but it is also acknowledged here that alternate (though apparently less common) definitions exist, where associativity of multiplication in a ring is not required. That's what I had in mind. So, it's all good, no need to point this out in the quaternion article, I think. It was good for me to learn, though. Thanks, Jens ] (]) 20:15, 15 December 2008 (UTC)


==You maybe interested in the Article Rescue Squadron==
First, you presume I am more guilty just because you incorrectly assume good faith. Barry has many times been incivil, and then turned around and hid behind a false premise of following the rules, in a transparent attempt to show himself to be acting in good faith, when he clearly wasn't. You look silly in falling for that trick. He's the little kid who hits another kid and then cries when the other kid hits back; the difference is that I, the other kid, don't back down when the adult in the room looks our way. He is the one who is starting it, and pretending he is being nice and good, and I won't play his game. I lack the normal human ability of pretense. I'll call a spade a spade, and an asshole an asshole.


{| cellpadding=5 style="border: thin solid red; background-color: white"
Worse, you attack my form and not my content. The problem is content, and Barry's lack of useful content. That's what the point of the RFC is. In fact, Barry is a troll; so what if I say something everyone, including you, can see is true? You went out of your way to not say so, but come on: "He has on a number of occasions made statements that could be construed without great difficulty as implying that he intends to provoke other editors, intends to sabotage the Perl article, or similarly negative things." Are you kidding? On the contrary, it would take great difficulty to construe his remarks in *any OTHER way.* He has said them explicitly and with no room for equivocation, and you know it. For anyone to criticize me calling him a troll as a matter of substance is just laughable.


|-
And I've never seen one valuable edit made my Barry that was illegitimately reverted. How about YOU provide some evidence?


|]
The fact is that Barry is a troll. The fact is that Barry's goal is to waste time and abuse Perl editors and the language itself. Don't quote AGF nonsense; he's proven, time and again, he has none; just because he smacks someone in the back of the head and smiles later, doesn't change the fact that he smacked someone, and that he will do it again (because he has, every time, done it again). You can only assume good faith until the contrary is proven. And the fact is that this whole time-wasting mess is because people like you have naively fallen for his antics, in some misguided attempt at "fairness," or simply being ignorant of the actual content issues involved (such as jbolden not understanding that there is *no possible way* to quantify popularity by looking at book sales or job availability).


|valign=top|Hello, Simetrical. Based on the templates on your talk page, please consider joining the ]. Rescue Squadron members are focused on rescuing articles from deletion, that might otherwise be lost forever. I think you will find our project matches your vision of Misplaced Pages. You can join ].
As I noted in the Perl mediation page, this whole thing is nonsense. Everyone except Barry should shut up and just treat his edits on a case-by-case basis, which means, of course, that most of them will be reverted, because most of them are useless and against consensus. <small>—The preceding ] comment was added by ] (] • ]) 00:35, 5 June 2006 (UTC{{{3|}}})</small><!-- -->


] (]) 15:34, 24 February 2009 (UTC)
:I have addressed some of your issues, specifically the accusation that he's a troll, etc. I do not accept your characterizations of -Barry-, for the reasons I've stated. I do not accept that it's ever necessary to explicitly insult anyone. In response to your request that I provide productive diffs, I haven't done that yet, you're correct. Here are diffs by -Barry- that I think are constructive: (possibly factually incorrect, but no one appears to have contradicted him) (maintaining the status quo, while providing a specific reason for why it's correct) . . . etc. In fact, most of his edits to the article have been kept, including all but a few of the handful I just linked to. I find your behavior far more objectionable than -Barry-'s. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 00:48, 5 June 2006 (UTC)


|} <!--Template based on Template:WPSPAM-invite-n, one of the 260 Category:WikiProject invitation templates -->
::Fine, you don't accept my characterization. So what? That makes it no less accurate. And whether you find being insulting to be necessary is unimportant. That you find my behavior, which is in direct response to his initial bad behavior in an attempt to fix his incorrect, NPOV, abusive, and otherwise bad edits, to be worse than his, speaks volumes about your credibility.


== {{tl|pf}} update ==
::Even if my behavior is "far worse" than his, which I do not buy for a moment, because I see through his antics while you do not, you still should focus on the *content* and stop being distracted.


Hi Simetrical, I just performed a massive update of {{tl|pf}} that ended up deprecating {{tl|cpf}}, so I redirected the latter. At some point after logging in, I intend to create a similar template for magic words (unless such a template already exists; I haven't searched for one yet), and I plan to tweak {{tlf|pf}} some more as well. Any thoughts? <small>BTW, if you reply, could you please leave a {{tl|tb}} on my talkpage? In all likelihood, I won't remember this when you do answer, or at least where it is. =P</small> --] as ] (]) 08:32, 28 February 2009 (UTC)
::More importantly: I did not ask you for useful edits, I asked you for useful edits that have been "illegitimately reverted." The first several you mention still stand, so they do not fit my request, and I do not care to look at the others to find out if any of them have been "illegitimately reverted." Again, can you provide examples? ] 02:08, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
:I have no idea why you're saying this to me (I guess I contributed to {{tl|pf}} at some point?). Do whatever you want. If you don't remember to check back here, that's just as well, so I haven't left a {{tl|tb}}. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 01:11, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
::According to its history, you created it (albiet in 2006). I just thought you might appreciate the heads-up, even if only for curiosity's sake, and even after such a length of time. And, while I'm sure ], your answer sounded more than a bit irritable (not to mention the possible consequences of a developer telling an anonymous IP address to "do whatever you want" =) ). --] as ] (]) 05:24, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
:::Yes, sorry, I was a bit confused. I vaguely remembered having something to do with it, but I'm long past any desire to fiddle with Misplaced Pages's templates. Thanks for the heads-up anyway. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 12:46, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
::::No problem. In retrospect, though, considering the age of the templates, I probably should have clarified why I was notifying you, specifically. And, if you don't mind my asking, what turned you off to working on Misplaced Pages templates? --] as ] (]) 03:22, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::I have better things to do. Like schoolwork, running , and developing MediaWiki. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 06:06, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::Aah, of course. =) Anything interesting or unusual happen on any of those fronts as of late? --] as ] (]) 08:01, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::You can check ] for MediaWiki development news. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 15:02, 2 March 2009 (UTC)


== About quoting claims that are apparently from Eben Moglen ==
:::We disagree on whether -Barry-'s behavior is better or worse than yours, fine. You're correct that I misread your request. Here are some examples of -Barry-'s edits that I think were illegitimately reverted: (no critical articles were linked externally prior to that; rather than provisos added to the link), (simpler and less verbose, seemingly because of the edit summary; it was however quickly by compromise), (addition of benchmarks, rather than adding provisos), (readded benchmarks with appropriate provisos, again), (more external links, on the grounds that a link discussing Perl had nothing to do with the language), (addition of POV template in response to repeated reversions of his additions, because of nonspecificity), (readdition of more specific POV-section template pending discussion on talk page, with no reason given in edit summary), (POV-section readded, again with no edit summary), and probably one or two in the revert war from May 15&ndash;30. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 02:41, 5 June 2006 (UTC)


Hi, be careful with quoting claims that are apparently from Eben Moglen. Moglen frequently publishes claims in the semi-public that are contradicting his view as lawyer. The same happened with me for cdrtools. I have a private statement from Eben Moglen that there of course is no license problem in cdrtools. After Moglen send me this statement, he aborted his license review for Shuttleworth. Please correct the cdrtools page.... ] (]) 12:44, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
:::: The style edits you mention, I could not care less about. Someone thought some other style was better; good for them. As to reverting benchmarks and "popularity" nonsense, you're simply wrong: those were discussed in the Talk page, consensus ruled. There was nothing illegitimate about those reverts. As to the POV template, that was an absolutely terrible edit on -Barry-'s part. He was, as you well know, attempting to insert his OWN POV, and then he complains about someone else's, and you think that's reasonable? On what planet? Again, you are ignoring the fact that this was one man, who admitted he was out to harm the Perl page, against *everybody else.* That is not enough to justify the POV template.
:I provided what I believe to be a ] for the citation. My source is an official publication of the Ubuntu Technical Board that indicates that they believe they were acting under Eben Moglen's advice. If you have another reliable source that contradicts that assertion, please provide it. If you have unverifiable personal knowledge, that's not relevant to Misplaced Pages's discussion of the topic. Only reliable sources that can be verified by our readers are acceptable for consideration in writing Misplaced Pages articles. If you do indeed have such a communication from Eben Moglen, I suggest you ask him to make a public statement on the matter that can be cited in the article. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 14:13, 11 March 2009 (UTC)


:: You do not have a reliable source but POV claims from some people only. It is simple for me to create a page that claims the opposite to what you found, the current claim is therefore not verifiable. POV statemens do not belong on WP, please remove it. ] (]) 14:23, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
:::: Shlomi Fish's article is a stupid one that makes no sense, and has no business being on ]. It's not about being negative, it's about Shlomi Fish being not very bright and making few, if any, reasonable points. Same thing with the Garshol article: it is simply a bad article, that makes *maybe* one or two good points. But it is not a worthy criticism. Come on, it actually uses a soundex algorithm, which is ugly in any language, as an example of how Perl is illegible, and does not make mention of the fact that Perl's version could be rewritten to look almost exactly like his Python version. It states that merely being different means that Perl is worse than Lisp! It gets many things simple *wrong*, like not even knowing the difference between lexical and dynamic scope. It's a muddled and stupid article from beginning to end.


:::Except that any page you create stating an opposite would fail ] and thus would be unusable on Misplaced Pages. Simetrical's source is reliable because it's a statement (or rather, a meeting transcription) from Ubuntu concerning a stated fact about them - therefore, that fact is verified. There is no issue here, you appear to simply be trying to cause trouble. <span style="white-space: nowrap;">「]]]?!」<sup>(Dinoguy1000)</sup></span> 18:45, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
:::: So I disagree that any of these reversions was illegitimate. Maybe you think the form in which they were reverted (without proper notice that he was going against consensus, etc.) was substandard, but that is not a direct reflection on the edit itself, all of which were entirely good and absolutely justified (except for perhaps the style ones, which I don't care about). ] 15:59, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
::::], please. I'm sure he believes he's correct and is trying to improve the accuracy of the article. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 22:30, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
:::My source clearly states the POV of a particular organization. "cdrtools cannot be legally distributed" would be a POV statement; "Ubuntu believes that cdrtools cannot be legally distributed" is NPOV. If you can find other notable parties that believe cdrtools can be legally distributed, you can feel free to add those to the article. I'm not aware of any significant ones other than Schilling himself. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 22:30, 11 March 2009 (UTC)


::::All openminded parties believe that cdrtools can be legally distributed. This includes e.g. Sun (Sun legal did do an in depth legal review for cdrtools last Autumn and Sun lagel did give an OK) Slackware and others. I am not sure about the intention of Ubuntu as Mark Shuttleworth did break his promise about including cdrtools in Ubunto after Eben Moglen aborted his legal review for cdrtools. It is unlikely that Ubuntu does this because they believe, there is a legal problem; Ubuntu still happily distributes other software with definite legal problems. Cdrkit, GNUvcdimager and libcdio are all based on code from cdrtools and they are all in conflict with GPL and the Copyright and thus cannot be legally distributed. Ubuntu is informed about this problem but ignores it.
::::: I didn't say consensus wasn't against him. I said consensus was wrong. You continue to say he was attempting to harm the Perl article, etc., which I continue to disagree with. If the article he linked to was stupid (entirely possible), then put up better criticisms, or put up a response, or qualify the link, don't just remove it and leave nothing. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 16:47, 5 June 2006 (UTC)


::::Besides Ubuntu, we curently mainly have two companies that only like to ship the undistributable "cdrkit": SuSe still "believes" that their customers need all the bugs in wodim that prevent it from being used and that their customers would not accept a working original cdrecord. RedHATs role is not clear (RedHAT maintainers told me that RedHAT managers forbid to include CDDL code into REdHAT but it seems that RedHAT recently upgraded star to a CDDL based version).
:::::: Who cares if you think consensus is wrong? Consensus is, and it is therefore right. And that you disagree that he was attempting to harm the Perl article, when you admit he said he would on several occasions, means you're simply being dishonest, and therefore I will cease to believe you are acting in good faith. ] 17:29, 5 June 2006 (UTC)


::::Eben Moglens legal opinion is that there is no license problem in the original cdrtools. He intentionally did not publish an "advise" not to publish cdrtools because this seems to be an opinion from someone else - guess who :-) If Moglen did publish information from private discussions I would publish our private mail discussion without asking him to prove his real opinion. Publishing leaked private discussions taken from the Ubuntu IRC is not a good idea as the related content is in conflict with the agreement of most parties that there is no legal problem with distributing the original software. ] (]) 16:31, 12 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::: Consensus is not always right on Misplaced Pages. See, for instance, Jimbo's imposition of ] T1, overriding the policymaking process; Jimbo and the ArbCom are permitted to overrule consensus. More to the point, look at ]: "At times, a group of editors may be able to, through persistence, numbers, and organization, overwhelm well-meaning editors and generate widespread support among the editors of a given article for a version of the article that is POV, inaccurate, or libelous. This is not a consensus." If any consensus is supposed to be binding, it's going to be a consensus of all Misplaced Pages, not a "consensus" of about five editors on a single page. It's telling that both outsiders in the RFC generally favored -Barry-.<p>And -Barry- never said he was attempting to harm the Perl article. That, I'm afraid, is an example of wishful thinking on your part. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 17:36, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
:::::If Sun and Slackware have officially stated that they believe cdrtools to be distributable, or if they actually distribute it, you should add that fact to the article, with citations. "All open-minded parties" is not a ] description and cannot be put in the article. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 21:39, 12 March 2009 (UTC)


::::::If POV cannot be in an article, why is there POV text in the article? All other facts I mentioned including the fact that Ubuntu does not care about legallity when publishing software are not POV and the latter fact would help to rate other claims. ] (]) 22:30, 12 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::: Duh. Of course consensus is not always right. But you have to actually show how it is wrong if you are going to assert that it is wrong, and expect anyone to care. You did nothing beyond asserting. YOU disagree; so what? You obviously don't understand the issues. If you really think that either of those articles was a good and reasonable article, then you do not know Perl well at all, and are unfit to have an opinion on whether the removal of them was legitimate.
:::::::The statement "Ubuntu does not care about legality when publishing software" is not neutral. If you don't understand this, then I'm afraid there's not much point in discussing this further. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 23:57, 12 March 2009 (UTC)


::::::::Your current text in the article is not neutral with respect to the cdrtools project - it rather reports about the POV from Mark Shuttleworth and I believe that POV statements do not belong into this WP article. You may add this to the article about Shuttleworth if you like to add things just for curiosity. Do you have a problem to understand that Ubuntu is currently in a self contradicting state (they claim that they "cannot" publish cdrtools because of supposed license problem but at the same time they happily publish software that definitely has license problems -> the fork, libcdio and vcdimager)? ] (]) 11:10, 13 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::: Further, sorry, I thought you had actually read the ] you commented on, especially point 10, wherein he said he would do something to the Perl article if he were a troll, and then proceeded to do that thing. ] 18:08, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
:::::::::As I said, it is clear by now that there is (unfortunately) no point in continuing this discussion. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 16:49, 13 March 2009 (UTC)


== Image resizing daemon ==
You can't "show" that something is POV or otherwise bad, in any kind of rigorous sense. You can give general principles that you believe should hold, and then explain how the principles fit; whether the reader agrees with the principles is up to him. I've explained that I don't think external critiques should generally be removed, and thus object to the removal of the critical (if perhaps not factually accurate) articles -Barry- linked to. Likewise, all potentially useful info should be kept with any relevant limitations noted, rather than being removed entirely, and therefore the benchmarks (of various implementations' speed measured against each other) should have been kept. POV templates serve a purpose and shouldn't be removed until the issues are discussed to everyone's satisfaction, or else discussed extensively with substantial outside input until as many people as possible are happy with the result.


Hi Simetrical<br>Since I've read you'll be mentoring the GSC project I've got a question/suggestion.<br>I find our handling of JPEG images a bit wanting. I'd think that ideally, we should convert all our uploaded JPEG files into a lossless format and store them as PNG instead. The thumbnailing process should then decide whether an image is best delivered as a PNG or JPG, depending on the image content. Ideally, that determination needs only be made once, and stored as some meta information with the picture.<br>There are two reasons behind all of this. First, we have a sizeable amount of photographs stored in a lossless format which should really be served as JPGs, to save both the users and servers the time and bandwith. Second, we would reduce the problem of ], so it wouldn't be always necessary to start from the original and attempt to redo all previous steps just to get the best quality. Currently, some editors are uploading JPGs with only little compression, which somewhat works around the problem but has a bandwith impact if the fullsize image is displayed somewhere on an article where the uncompressed image will be served, and not a compressed thumbnail.<br>I assume that thumbnail format and image format are already somewhat decoupled, judging by what I read about TIFF support. I'm unsure how hard it would be to do so down to the specific images, but I think it would be beneficial. I could think of both quick&easy and hard&slower algorithms to determine whether a picture is best served as PNG or JPEG, and as I said this only has to be done once per image. And if we someday want to support more complex formats, like ] (which might be possible if the conversion happens on seperate servers) that decoupling would certainly be helpful, too.<br>] 11:09, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
I read everything in the RFC, and addressed point 10 explicitly. To wit:<div style="border: 1px solid #aaaaaa; background-color: #fff; margin: 0.5em 2em 0.5em 2em; padding: .2em;">"There's a con section ( http://en.wikipedia.org/Perl#Con ) that I'd have gone crazy in if I was being a troll." is a ], whose condition is not necessarily true. He did not call himself a troll, he made a ] ] statement.</div>He never, in other words, announced any kind of intent to damage the article. ("e said he would do something to the Perl article if he were a troll, and then proceeded to do that thing", with its implicit "therefore he admitted he was a troll", conflates a ]'s truth value with its ]: ''p'' &rarr; ''q'' does not necessarily imply that ''q'' &rarr; ''p''. His exact wording was "go crazy in", in any case, which he didn't by anyone's standards except perhaps those of a few pro-Perl editors.) —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 18:23, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
:To be honest, I don't know so much about our image thumbnailing right now. Hopefully this summer will be an opportunity to clean it up somewhat, and while we do that, we can look at our options for long-standing feature requests like this. There are clearly cases in which conversion from PNG to JPEG during thumbnailing would be useful, even if the storage format isn't consistently lossless. But in any event, none of this is related to the actual GSoC project, which is fairly narrow in scope and doesn't necessarily have to touch MediaWiki itself at all. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 13:19, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
:: Ah, alright. Well, I'm happy if those possibilities are kept in mind (didn't know that was a "long-standing" request). I wasn't sure how integrated that dameon would be.<br>Thanks! ] 13:34, 28 April 2009 (UTC)


== PD-Status ==
: You are wrong on several counts. First, YOU may think that an external link should not be removed, but your opinion on that subject has no bearing. Consensus agreed it was incorrect and therefore misleading and therefore should not be included. The end. Regarding the POV template, what you say is just nonsense. By your logic, I can add that to every single article and no one should remove it, until I agree, or after much time-wasting discussion with others. On the contrary, simply being overruled does not justify the POV template. This could not be any more clear: your view is nonscalable and logically unsupportable.


Hi, I came accross {{tl|PD-status}}, and was wondering if it is still useful/used in our current set of policies. If it's not, perhaps we should delete it ? —] (] • ]) 00:33, 4 May 2009 (UTC)
: Your hyperparsing of his language is willfull blindness. Of course we all know what he actually meant: he said "if i was a troll, i would do X." He did X. Therefore, he admitted that he was trolling. This is absolutely clear and true, despite your willfull attempt to not see it. You are taking AGF way too far.
:I have no idea. I haven't been involved with copyright in Misplaced Pages in a couple of years. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 13:38, 4 May 2009 (UTC)


==ALT text hovering tooltip==
: Oh well. You do not matter, and I am done bothering with you. You've proven you are unfit to comment on the issues at hand. ] 19:05, 5 June 2006 (UTC)


Hi, I believe you added the MediaWiki software for ALT text in images late last year. Thanks from everyone at ]! Several of us were wondering if you could adjust the onmouseover hovering tooltip to reflect the ALT text, if it's defined. It seems redundant to have it just repeat the caption, although I see the point for captionless images such as the thumbnails on the Main Page. If you could make the tooltip work for images of math-mode equations, we'd be especially grateful. Thanks in advance! ] (]) 17:20, 5 May 2009 (UTC)
== Your evidence in the arb case ==


:Why would you want the alt text to be reflected in a tooltip as a general rule? —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 20:30, 5 May 2009 (UTC)
I didn't want to directly edit your comment and didn't think this was worth opening my own piece of evidence but Ben for Wikireview is {{user|Benapgar}} ]<sup><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></sup> 00:13, 6 June 2006 (UTC)


Thanks for your reply! Here are a few reasons. First, if the caption is visible (as is customary on Misplaced Pages), then having it appear again in the tooltip is redundant. Second, as mentioned ], sighted editors would like to be able to read the ALT text more easily, both for checking it and for better understanding the image itself. Although the ALT text is intended mainly to depict the image for those who can't see it, sometimes even sighted people benefit from cues as to what they should be looking at. They see, but they don't see. I often had that experience myself when I was first learning architecture; I would see the building, but I didn't really take it in. Having ALT text easily available is another avenue by which we can inform our readers more effectively.
:Already been mentioned, but since two people seemed to care enough to drop a note, I may as well add it. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 00:16, 6 June 2006 (UTC)


Conveniently available math-mode ALT text would help lay-readers understand the formulae better, I believe. Not everyone will understand mathematical equations written in symbols, but some will understand them if they're translated into English. Not many formulae have ALT text, it's true, but I intend to push the mathematicians to include more ALT text, and I aspire to write an automated ALT-text generator for LaTeX formulae this summer.
== ] ==


The usual method of finding the ALT text on the image "Properties" isn't convenient if the ALT text is long, which may often be the case; the ALT text scrolls off the edge of the popup window. You may wish to also speak to ], a prominent editor in literature who would like to foster more ALT text. ] (]) 02:49, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
This isn't a thanks-for-voting message (at least, not now I've read your talkpage it isn't!), just a quick apology for any concern I may have caused with the whole rapid-fire editing thing earlier in the year, and a personal reassurance that it won't happen again – ] 17:21, 12 June 2006 (UTC)


:Alt text has the purpose of allowing people with images off (because they're blind, or otherwise) to understand the content of the picture. Its purpose is not to help people who can see the image understand what they're supposed to be looking at. The alt text should say no more or less than you would get from a brief inspection of the image. If it says less, the alt text should be improved. If it says more, the extra info should be moved to the caption, where everyone will be able to see it. The caption is the correct place to point out important details that the viewer might have missed, and that info will then be available to anyone, whether they're viewing the image or the alt text. Putting extra info in the tooltip is bad for accessibility, because most people won't think to hover to get the tooltip. Automatically mirroring the alt text in the tooltip will encourage people to provide bad alt text, namely alt text that's too verbose and says more than the image does.
== "Words to avoid" ==


:As for helping editors check it: info that's useful to editors should be displayed on the edit screen. It should not be visible to ordinary users, most of whom are not editors. If editors want to easily check the accuracy of alt text, it would be easy to write a Gadget that would display it inline next to every image, which is much more useful than requiring you to hover over it.
Hi. I noticed on ] where you link in your edit summary to ]. Please read that page completely! Just because "claim" is mentioned on that page, doesn't mean it must never be used. Your change was actually to a sentence which is pretty similar to one of the examples given on ] as an "acceptable case" :-). I won't revert you because your phrasing is no worse, but please don't go around blindly changing all occurrances of "claim". &mdash; ] 16:15, 13 June 2006 (UTC)


:I agree that it's pointless to have the tooltip reflect a visible caption. If a caption is visible, then the tooltip should be empty unless separately specified (not that there's any way to do that currently, I don't think).
:Well, it wasn't blind. Having reread the page, it appears that either I misremembered it or I read it quite a long time ago. I agree much more strongly with : ''claim'' shouldn't be used in the sense of "to state to be true". Now that you've pointed this out, you may be interested in my proposal at ]. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 01:30, 14 June 2006 (UTC)


:Math is a whole separate issue. As a mathematician (entering a Ph.D. program this fall) who does quite a lot of chatting in plain text over IRC, I have to say LaTeX is actually pretty good for comprehensible plain-text math. Trying to write complicated equations out accurately in English is impossible. It would be like trying to follow a math class without looking at the board, which I know from experience just doesn't work. You get capitals confused with lowercase, parentheses are hard to track even if they're explicitly stated (which they usually aren't), etc. The best way of conveying equations in plain text (barring ASCII art, which doesn't make good alt text for multiple reasons) is basically just LaTeX, with some of the excess formatting removed. E.g., if we take this equation from ]:
== Notice of arbitration ==


:<math>\mathbf{q} = - k \nabla u</math>
Hi! I filled an concerning the usage of "liberation" in WP articles. If you are interested in, please add your name to the list of the involved parties and type your statement.--] 20:30, 13 June 2006 (UTC)


:the alt text is:
:The Arbitration Committee does not settle content disputes. I can predict with some confidence that unless you put forth allegations of misconduct, your case will get rejected in short order, and even if you do put forth such allegations, the ArbCom will only rule on those and not on the dispute itself. I suggest you try to show a clear consensus of the Misplaced Pages community by means of a ] and put it up on ]. If no clear consensus emerges, the rule of thumb is that you don't change anyone else's wording over to your preference, and vice versa. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 01:35, 14 June 2006 (UTC)


:<blockquote>\mathbf{q} = - k \nabla u</blockquote>
== Copyright types ==


:Good alt text would probably be "q = -k del u" or "q = -k gradient u". "q equals negative k times the gradient of u" would be very poor alt text, IMO. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 14:26, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
I recall seeing your response to a question regarding the different types of copyright licenses. (Can't find it now.) Do you know if there is a table of license type characteristics which might help a user of anyone sellect the best license for the particular work and its application? Thanks. <small> ...] (])</small> 13:34, 14 June 2006 (UTC)


The Gadget idea for registered editors sounds great to me, although others might not agree. For me, the hovering tooltip was only one option of several for helping editors to review the ALT text. The redundancy of the caption in the tooltip does seem pointless, as you say, but if it can't be removed easily, then it's probably not worth fixing. I also agree that the ALT text should not say more than the image, although IMO there's an art to crafting good ALT text that says no more than the image but says it well and usefully, even for sighted editors. But I also suspect that most editors won't take such care in crafting ALT text.
:Do you want help on choosing under what license to release a work whose copyright status you control, or determining the copyright status of an existing work, or determining exactly which tag to use for a known copyrighted/public domain image? Respectively, you would want ], http://www.copyright.cornell.edu/training/Hirtle_Public_Domain.htm, and ] or ]. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 21:09, 14 June 2006 (UTC)


I haven't thought through the math-mode issues, but speaking as a physics professor who's used LaTeX continually for over 20 years, I'm not convinced that it's the best option for ALT text. However, a slightly parsed version of it might work well, and wouldn't require much tweaking to program. We should probably collect more data on what would be most useful for different categories of Misplaced Pages's readers. In the example you give above, it's obvious to us two that '''q''' is a vector field and ''u'' is a scalar field, but that won't be obvious to most readers. Speaking for myself, I'm not willing to sacrifice the understanding of all the others. A well-written exposition in the main article would (try to) make the equations intelligible to lay-readers, but as I'm sure you know, such exposition is still rare on Misplaced Pages. So, in my view, English versions of mathematical equations can serve a purpose on Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 01:06, 7 May 2009 (UTC)
::Okay thanks. This will certainly get me started. What I want to end up with is a table I can republish to the Misplaced Pages that lists all of the characteristics of a copyright at the top and the various copyrights along the side with the body of the table filled with the states that relate each characteristic to each copyright type - job I will definitely need help in accomplishing if it is to be of value to everyone else as well. Thanks. <small> ...] (])</small> 22:28, 15 June 2006 (UTC)


I agree that most editors won't take a lot of care in crafting alt text. But that's okay; it's a wiki, so the people who know and care about good alt text can write it.
==AFD==
As an AIW member please review ] and please take a side. {{unsigned2|15:38, 16 June 2006|Richard Arthur Norton (1958- )}}


As for LaTeX, extra info on the equations might be useful, depending on the audience. (Extra explanation makes the material more useful to lay readers, but less useful to knowledgeable readers. I've read popular articles on mathematical research where it took me halfway through the article to even figure out what field of mathematics they were talking about . . .) But if it is useful, it needs to be in the article text, not in the alt text. I'm not sure what sort of alt text you'd like for math images, but it should be as faithful and readable a translation as possible, not add extra explanatory info.
:Done. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 20:27, 16 June 2006 (UTC)


I do agree that LaTeX isn't at all the ''best'' alt text, but it's actually pretty decent: mostly too ugly and complicated, is all. Incomprehensible to lay readers, of course, but then, I don't expect that most of the equations in a typical math/physics article (e.g., ]) will make any sense to non-experts anyway. If it could be simplified, that would be great, of course, as long as it doesn't become significantly more ambiguous.
== Thank you ==


Anyway, I guess the pending requests boil down to:
] Thank you, Simetrical, for your kind words and your trust that you have placed in me, as you have echoed ]. Thank you, and God bless. ] (]) 00:51, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
:Er...that wasn't a thank you for RFC. I thought your words were kind, and I appreciated them. ] (]) 00:56, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
::Okay, is that better? :P —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 01:03, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
::: :-( ] (]) 01:20, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
:::: AAAAAAA ] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 01:28, 20 Aaaa 2006 (AAA)


# Don't duplicate caption in tooltip. There's probably not any need for tooltips at all on . . . well, basically any Misplaced Pages images. To stave off complaints, though, it might be best to add an extra tooltip= option for images in case people really want one. The code involving this needs to be refactored, it's kind of a mess . . .
== Adding "liberation" to "]" ==
# Better alt text for math images. This is probably doable pretty easily, but most of the relevant code is in ] as far as I know, so probably not something for the faint-hearted.


If there aren't bugs open for these, you might want to ]. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 21:17, 7 May 2009 (UTC)
I filled the proposal for ]. Please find it ]. I would be thankfull for your commennts, suggestions and corrections.--] 16:22, 20 June 2006 (UTC)


== Missing paragraph found for ] ==
== ] ==


3.5 years ago you pretty much built the ] article by from ]'s ]. The ] described them as "threefold" but only discussed two. While you noticed this and added the comment <nowiki>"<!-- Huh? Only two listed -->""</nowiki>. Fortunately you did not change the word "threefold", so while reading the article today I noticed the discrepancy. I discovered that of Smith's Dictionary omit the second of three paragraphs, although the missing paragraph is present in many other online versions. I just finished adding it to the article. I'd be rather surprised if you remembered this ancient edit, but thought that you might be interested in hearing of a forgotten riddle's closure. -- ] (]) 11:54, 21 June 2009 (UTC)


== User:Simetrical/WikipediaSister ==
I loved your analysis of anonymous edits here. Thanks for taking the time. --] 23:08, 21 June 2006 (UTC)


I took the liberty of making two small changes to your subpage ]. The first change was the removal of an incorrect protection template, the second of a documentation page. Please see the edit summaries. I hope this is fine with you. If you have any questions, please write me on my talkpage. ] (]) 14:15, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
== notability guideline proposal ==


== Discussion on technical village pump about alt text ==
Hi, me and another person drafted a guideline proposal at ] and if you're interested I would appreciate your comments or edits. Cya around. ] 09:59, 22 June 2006 (UTC)


See ]. ''']'''] 10:48, 19 September 2009 (UTC)
== FOTW ] suggestion ==
==YYYY-MM-DD format; footnotes==
I thank you for keeping a calm head about this. I do not think we are at the point yet to issue this yet, since I was still able to get some images deleted by using email. Also, we are still in the process of redrawing images for yall in the SVG format, so I am going to wait and see what is left before any action is taken. ] <small><sup>]</sup></small> 06:02, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
FYI -- there is a discussion at as to whether or not to allow the use of the all-numeric YYYY-MM-DD format in footnotes/references.


I'm mentioning it to you in the event that you would like to join in the discussion or follow it, as I recognize that this is an issue you have been interested in in the past. Thanks.--] (]) 08:24, 30 September 2009 (UTC)
== Liquid Threads ==


== Entities ==
Hi, you're one of the few people that's listed over on the Liquid Threads pages that's actually reachable. I'm trying to locate someone --- anyone! --- who is associated with that project. Do you have any idea who that might be? Please contact me at david AT masseventslabs DOT com. Thanks. {{unsigned2|19:20, 25 June 2006|24.61.157.16}}


You might've noticed already, but named entities aren't actually output from wikimarkup. On most pages, there seem to be just two problematic entities, one from ] and one from . —] (]) 19:25, 12 November 2009 (UTC)
:Done. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 21:40, 25 June 2006 (UTC)


No, I hadn't noticed that, actually. That's a very interesting point &ndash; it could be a much better solution than changing the doctype. Thanks for the pointer! —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 17:25, 13 November 2009 (UTC)
== Flags and copyright ==


== Thank you for correcting me ==
Re ]: in an attempt to clarify and preserve as a reference for future similar cases, I have written ]. Maybe you'd like to help improve and/or correct it? Note that apparently the precise coloring is ''not'' sufficiently original to warrant copyrightability in the U.S.... ] 08:47, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
:I've looked over the page and commented there. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 00:15, 28 June 2006 (UTC)


Just wanted to say thanks for correcting me after I removed a discussion that I'd started (and had been resolved) on a talk page. I'd seen other people remove discussions from talk pages after they'd gotten old and become irrelevant and thought that was appropriate. I appreciate you pointing me to the page on[REDACTED] that explains not to do that , and talks about archiving, etc. Whenever I think I'm starting to know almost everything about editing on wikipedia, I find out just how wrong I am - and I appreciate greatly the people who point it out to me when I screw up! So thanks! ] (]) 06:12, 12 January 2010 (UTC)
== Adminship ==
Hi, just thought I would leave you a message just so you know that your recent addition to the requests for adminship page is not showing up properly, I think the problem is that the USERNAME section has not been replaces by your actual username. Just so you know :-) ] 00:08, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
:D'oh. Thanks! —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 00:15, 28 June 2006 (UTC)


==You RfA== == ] ==


I removed you're changes in this article. read the comment and use the talkpage(of the article) please ;) ] 18:25, 10 February 2010 (UTC)
In your nomination it says you have 5000 edits, but Interiots tool only lists 2000 How is this the case? Have I missed something? ]] 09:36, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
:Ignore me, I was looking at the wrong part of the summary :) (mainspace edits) ]] 10:42, 28 June 2006 (UTC)


==mms://==
==Clothing categories==
Thanks for adding that to the default of MediaWiki. You rock! :) Take Care...<small style="white-space:nowrap;border:1px solid #900;padding:1px;">] • ] • 22:50, 26 March 2010 (UTC)</small>


== ACCAPP-61 ==
Hi, ], this is ], one of the people working on a better categorization of the clothing articles. We took your comment about parentheses on the ] discussion page to heart, and we're considering categorizing "toga" and its relatives under ], with similar text as now found on ]. Does this seem OK to you? Perhaps you have an even better idea? Inquiring minds are inquiring. ;) The general discussion is on ]; you're welcome to join in, if it's not too boring or silly for you. Thanks muchly, ] 01:35, 29 June 2006 (UTC)


Account Approval, ACCAPP-61
==Your RFA==
I left an oppose comment on your RFA. I am open to changing my mind if you can reassure me that you will not let YOUR opinion be your compass when performing your sysop duties. ] ] 11:21, 1 July 2006 (UTC)


<s>The ball is now, apparently, in your court - please give me a shout on my talk if you need anything from me. Many thanks, <small><span style="border: 1px solid; background-color:darkblue;">]]</span></small> 21:21, 10 April 2010 (UTC)</s>
== Re: ] ==


:Sorted, thank you.<small><span style="border: 1px solid; background-color:darkblue;">]]</span></small> 18:29, 11 April 2010 (UTC)
You asked me to unprotect the template so you could make some changes to it. Just reminding you that I did reduce it to semi-protection, so whenever you get around to making your changes... Later. — <small>Jul. 1, '06</small><tt> ''' <<u class=plainlinks>&#124;</u>>'''</tt>
{{resolved}}


== Re: Substitution of {{tl|unsigned}} == == You are now a Reviewer ==


]
Thanks for the tip, I will go add my opinion there. Just as a comment, I used to leave the template without substitution, until I read ] and was, at a later time, ] to substitute it. I am not sure the thread will get replies, though, as it is already over 3 months old. Maybe you should (I have never done this before) move the thread to the bottom to prevent someone else from archiving it and give it some life, or creating a new discussion section? Note that the policy has been changed without objection 3 months ago. -- ] 22:35, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
Hello. Your account has been granted the "{{mono|1=reviewer}}" userright, allowing you to ] on certain flagged pages. Pending changes, also known as flagged protection, is currently undergoing a ] scheduled to end 15 August 2010.


Reviewers can review edits made by users who are not ] to articles placed under pending changes. Pending changes is applied to only ], similarly to how semi-protection is applied but in a more controlled way for the trial. The list of articles with pending changes awaiting review is located at ].
== New question ==


When reviewing, edits should be accepted if they are not obvious ] or ], and not clearly problematic in light of the reason given for protection (see ]). More detailed documentation and guidelines can be found ].


If you do not want this userright, you may ask any administrator to remove it for you at any time. <!-- Template:Reviewer-notice --> ] (]) 18:03, 19 June 2010 (UTC)
Hi, I know it's close to the deadline, but I've added a Q to your RFA. Regards, ] 09:01, 3 July 2006 (UTC)


== Request for Adminship == == Datablification of infoboxes ==


You might be interested in . He has some IE<8-specific CSS, but I haven't been able to test in IE6. —] (]) 12:49, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
It is my regretful task to inform you that your recent request for adminship failed to achieve consensus to promote, and has been closed. Please do not be discouraged; a number of users have had their first RfA end without consensus, but have been promoted overwhelmingly in a later request. Please continue to make outstanding contributions to Misplaced Pages, and consider requesting adminship again in the future. You may find ] helpful in deciding when to consider running again. If I can be of any help to you, please do not hesitate to ask. <span style="font-family: Verdana">] <font color="#7b68ee">(<small>] • ]</small>)</font></span> 04:17, 5 July 2006 (UTC)


== Your edit on LGBT and Judaism ==


No problem with this. You are, of course, correct in principle.] (]) 18:29, 12 July 2010 (UTC)
== Sorry about not making admin, but we can clean together ==


== Inclupedia ==
Regardless of whether you Photoshopped it or sketched it, it's a violation of the original work's author's exclusive right to prepare ]s of their property. It will have to be deleted. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 22:23, 5 July 2006 (UTC)
:: Simetrical, you missed a couple then ] , ] I'll be happy to post more, In fact, I'll be happy to start doing this for you if you'd like. I'd say any photo of a painting would count too, its a copy as well. We've got a lot of cleaning to do! --] 01:27, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
:You're correct, any photo of a painting counts. And yes, there are a huge number of inappropriate images on Misplaced Pages. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 03:31, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
::Well, allright! as soon as I finish filling a complaint, I'll turn right around and do the same thing thats been done to me. If you can't beat em, join em. I think the best approach is to simply delete with a single entry ], nothing more, and use the speedy tag. I have lots of energy and can acomplish a lot in a short period of time. --] 03:48, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
:::I'm not quite sure what you're saying, but regardless, the two images you posted appear to be fine, since the bases for them were public-domain. I couldn't find anything much on Sir Francis Bacon's image either, but since it seems almost certain to be a period portrait, I'm not going to bother trying to claim it's a copyright violation. As for the signet ring, it was also public-domain, so I uploaded a shot of it directly to commons: ]. Generally, while your drawings are very nice (certainly a hell of a lot better than I could do), if the base work is free it would typically be better to use that directly. I encourage you to try making artist's impressions of things where no free image can be easily found, out of whole cloth—you might be able to find some suitable requests at ]. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 04:23, 6 July 2006 (UTC)


I dug through the revision history of your userpage and read your comments about notability. I created the outline of a proposal ] and ] for addressing the notability issue. I wonder if there is a way for both the inclusionists and the deletionists to have their way. That is, Misplaced Pages can remain the way it is now, with the same rules on notability. But we can create another project, Inclupedia, that is like an extension of Misplaced Pages. That is, to use a programming analogy, it will be kind of as if someone wrote:
== Background is sneaky ==


<syntaxhighlight lang="php">
Hi. You recently that '''<code>background</code> is a sneaky attribute'''. This is true and also funny. (One minor quibble: technically, it's a property, not a attribute. But it's definitely sneaky.) Thanks for the great aphorism, ]<small>]</small> 06:22, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
class Inclupedia extends Misplaced Pages {
public nonNotableArticle = array ( ... );
...
}
</syntaxhighlight>


That's strictly an analogy rather than actual code, but you get the idea. Inclupedia will have everything Misplaced Pages has, and more. If a revision is made to Misplaced Pages, it will be mirrored to Inclupedia through the backend. And ideally the way this should work is that if a revision is made to, say, the ] article on Inclupedia, that revision should be added to the article revision history at Misplaced Pages, provided that Inclupedia user isn't blocked on Misplaced Pages (in which case, he will be blocked from making such a revision on Inclupedia as well, because the top-level revision of an Inclupedia article that exists on Misplaced Pages is supposed to always be the same as Misplaced Pages's top-level revision for that article). On the other hand, suppose the non-notable article ] is edited at Inclupedia. That revision won't respawn on Misplaced Pages, because the article doesn't exist on Misplaced Pages.
== of interest ==


You've been around longer than I have. Does a wiki for non-notable topics have a chance in heck of getting implemented within the Wikimedia umbrella? And if not, is there any way to overcome the technical difficulties of creating an up-to-date Misplaced Pages mirror? (Because whatever else Inclupedia is, it's built on the foundation of an up-to-date Misplaced Pages mirror.) ] and such seem like possible hindrances. But maybe it could be dealt with by getting the recent changes periodically, throwing the recent changes metadata for any un-updated items in a database table, and then polling every so often to see if the full data for those revisions are available. Ugh, it is probably going to be a lot uglier than using the backend, though. Thanks, <b>]</b> <sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub> 21:48, 25 July 2010 (UTC)
Thought you mind find ] of interest. ] <sup>(])</sup> 22:27, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
:On a technical level, you'd really want to do this by just using the same database, and hiding the non-notable stuff (including links to non-notable pages, etc.) from the people who don't want to see it. But I think this is really a technical solution to a social problem. I don't expect it will be accepted. I don't think there will be any solution short of intervention by the Wikimedia Foundation. I predict that Wikimedia ''will'' begin to take a more active role in running the projects in coming years, with at least some communities becoming severely dysfunctional while Wikimedia becomes larger and wealthier. The best possible result of this would be to impose a sane decision-making structure on Misplaced Pages, where a small group can make informed decisions that are actually respected. Wikimedia has only done this in a few places, like copyright and BLP, but I expect there will be more to come.<p>For the time being, I'd give it up. There's no way to push for change on Misplaced Pages, when you have to convince a supermajority of hundreds of people who probably won't even read your arguments. The policy-making structure here may as well have been explicitly designed to promote reactionism. The only editorial or administrative policies that can succeed are the ones that everyone agrees with to begin with, because the editors and admins will just ] if they don't agree. The only areas where real change can currently occur are technical things, where the result of a decision can be imposed regardless of community support. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 15:06, 26 July 2010 (UTC)


== Edit "war" == == Revert in HTML5 video ==


You reverted the entry published on 10:18, 10 August 2010 without any further notification? Why? You think it don't meet the WP:EL? Ohter external links provided with the articel may? Don't think so!! <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 18:26, 14 August 2010</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned -->
Do you know of any examples of the term "edit war" which occur without reference to a wiki? ] 21:57, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
:Erm, okay, it's not a "common Internet term" — I was thinking of ''flame war''. It (or "revert war") is the term of choice on wikis, though, as far as I've seen, probably influenced by ''flame war'', and it does use the word ''war'' in a perfectly standard way: compare to terms such as ''battle of wits'', ''war against drugs'', ''war on poverty'', ''war of words'', '']'', the aforesaid ''flame war'', etc., etc. The general usage is ubiquitous in English, and the specific usage deeply entrenched into Misplaced Pages jargon, so while you may be of the opinion that it trivializes war, saying so outside talk pages and your own userspace isn't the right way to act on those opinions. Maybe you should put up an essay in your userspace about it, use your alternative terms whenever you talk about the phenomenon on a talk page or wherever, and encourage likeminded people to do the same. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 23:40, 12 July 2006 (UTC)


:You're right, so I've removed all the other external links that endorse particular wrapper software. There are too many of them for us to reasonably mention all of them, and I don't see any particular way to figure out which are the best or most useful. The general guides we link to (from reputable and significant sources) should be enough. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 16:48, 15 August 2010 (UTC)
== citation 2006 Israel-Lebanon crisis ==
Nevermind - they just use an alternate spelling and I missed it.--] 06:16, 16 July 2006 (UTC)


== ] ==
==asbestos==
You wrote "Readd bit about substitutes being inferior " but it was already there if you read it. I did not remove it. And what is wrong with 'claim'? That is exactly what it was. However, the way you wrote it still is better. I am going to have to remove now a redundant comment about substitutes being inferior, since it was already there. Finally, I removed again the redundant comment about critics not believing numbers of asbestos deaths. It already said 'generally accepted'. And Fox News is NOT a reliable source. ] 21:12, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
:First of all, Fox News is as ] as any other general news outlet (i.e., reliable enough for us to cite if nothing better is available), prejudiced though many are against it due to its political slant. Second of all, it's definitely reliable enough to guarantee that the person who made the criticism is in fact the comparatively notable critic in question, which would be good enough to make it usable even if the actual news part weren't reliable. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 21:40, 17 July 2006 (UTC)


Hi. As you recently commented in the ] regarding the ongoing usage and trial of ], this is to notify you that there is an ''']''' with regard to keeping the tool switched on or switching it off while improvements are worked on and due for release on November 9, 2010. This new poll is only in regard to this issue and sets no precedent for any future usage. ''']''' on this issue is greatly appreciated. ] (]) 23:48, 20 September 2010 (UTC)
== Thank you for supporting my recent RfA! ==
<!-- EdwardsBot 0073 -->


== ] of ] ==
{| style="border: 1px solid {{{border|#FF33CC}}}; background-color: {{{color|#ffddff}}};"
]] has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at ]. Thank you.<!--Template:Tfdnotice--> ] (]) 06:34, 16 October 2010 (UTC)
|rowspan="2" valign="top" | ]
|rowspan="2" |
|style="font-size: x-large; padding: 0; vertical-align: bottom; height: 1.1em; color: #FF0099;" | '''Thanks for contributing to my successful ]'''
|-
|style="vertical-align: top; border-top: 1px solid #FF0099;" | To the people who have supported my request: I appreciate the show of confidence in me and I hope I live up to your expectations!<br />To the people who opposed the request: I'm certainly not ignoring the constructive criticism and advice you've offered. I thank you as well!<br /><b><font color="#FF0099">♥! <b><i><font color="#FF00FF">~Kylu (]|]) </font></i></b> 06:15, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
|}
:Thanks for your vote of confidence in me during my RfA. I really appreciate it! <b><i><font color="#FF00FF">~Kylu (]|]) </font></i></b> 06:15, 19 July 2006 (UTC)


==Alphabetical ordering==
== Hrmm... ==
Hi, I see over at MediaWiki that you're working on a solution to the age-old alphabetical ordering problem, which is greatly encouraging. Any idea when something might be ready to try out? What kind of help (if any) would you need regarding the sort rules for particular foreign alphabets?--] (]) 13:23, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
:I wrote a framework that theoretically allows category sort to work non-ASCIIbetically, but it's missing the part that actually does language-specific sorting. It just ASCII uppercases everything, so sort is case-insensitive for English, but that's about it. The remaining steps are pretty well-defined, since there are well-known algorithms (], ]) to generate sort keys for various languages, so there's not much to help with unless you're willing to do the actual coding. ] mentioned in #mediawiki in the last day that he was looking at it. It might be finished and deployed within a month or two, with any luck. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 17:57, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
::That's good to know, thanks. Any chance of this being extended to correctly alphabetize the overall list of article titles at ] and ]?--] (]) 18:02, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
:::The current system only works for category pages. Theoretically it could be extended to other lists, but I don't know of any specific plans to do that. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 18:05, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
::::OK, thanks, well good to know progress is being made overall.--] (]) 18:13, 7 January 2011 (UTC)


== ] of ] ==
Someone just told me you were bashing on me (on IRC awhile back) for changing my signature a couple of times. What's up with that? :-) My bad... --] <sup><font color="#3D9140">]</font></sup> 02:40, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
]] has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at ]. Thank you.<!--Template:Tfdnotice--> ] 23:07, 10 January 2011 (UTC)
:Heh, I wasn't serious. It was more a single passing remark expressed in a somewhat hyperbolic fashion so as to be more interesting than "I just got momentarily disoriented by Lord Voldemort having changed his signature for the second time in whatevertheactualtimespanwas". This is why posting logs of the IRC channels is banned — people are rarely very serious there, and it's very easy to misinterpret what people say if it's taken out of context. The exact quote was, "<code>* Simetrical wonders why ] feels compelled to change his sig, like, every five days</code>", about two months ago. A few hours later, someone else remarked that ] "<code>changes more often than Lord Voldemort's signature</code>".<p>Don't take it personally or anything. You did change your sig a couple of times in rapid succession around then, I think, didn't you? You don't seem to have changed it for a while now, but sigs can be disorienting if changed often. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 02:48, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
::Hehe... no, I know you were kidding. I just had someone checking some of the past stuff for me and that's what she came up with. I just like to keep people on their toes. ;-) And I guess that's partly why I don't IRC. Oh well... It is faaaar past my bedtime. Night. --] <sup><font color="#3D9140">]</font></sup> 03:15, 21 July 2006 (UTC) ]


== ] of ] ==
{{User:Ingoolemo/Threads/06/07/25a}}
]] has been nominated for merging with ]. You are invited to comment on the discussion at ]. Thank you.<!--Template:Tfmnotice--> -] (]) 21:23, 23 January 2011 (UTC)


== Tables on MediaWiki wikis, and border="1" ==
== my RfA ==


Hey Simetrical. I saw some of your contributions to discussions elsewhere concerning HTML 5, tables, and ''border="1"''. I would appreciate your participation in this discussion: ]. --] (]) 18:31, 17 November 2011 (UTC)
<div style="align: center; padding: 1em; border: solid 2px darkblue; background-color: lightcyan;">] Thanks for your support in my RfA! Unfortunately, the request did not pass, with a vote of (43/16/7). But your support was appreciated and I'll just keep right on doing what I do. Maybe I'll see ya around -- I'll be here!<br>Cheers! - ] 17:32, 27 July 2006 (UTC)</div>
:I haven't really been active in MediaWiki development or related things for over a year. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 23:41, 17 November 2011 (UTC)
== ] of ] ==
]] has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at ].<!--Template:Tfdnotice--> ] (]) 05:54, 8 December 2011 (UTC)
== Nomination for deletion of Template:Identity ==
]] has been ]. You are invited to comment on the discussion at ].<!--Template:Tfdnotice--> ] (]) 10:13, 31 August 2015 (UTC)


== ] ==
== "since we follow US copyright law" ==


{{Misplaced Pages:Arbitration Committee Elections December 2015/MassMessage}} ] (]) 12:56, 23 November 2015 (UTC)
Have you a proof for this? --] 16:46, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
<!-- Message sent by User:Mdann52@enwiki using the list at https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=User:Mdann52/list&oldid=691988767 -->
:Sure. Look at, e.g., ]. Of course, we may sometimes be ''stricter'' than US law is, but never more lenient. Most of the ], including the ones hosting the English Misplaced Pages, are based in the United States, so we can't break US law. (It's actually somewhat more complicated than that, because the WMF itself is protected by various shield laws, but they certainly can't encourage copyright infringement under US law and they have to remove it if they see it and know it's illegal. Regardless, you'll find that US law is what most of our copyright policy is based on.) —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 19:23, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
== Nomination for deletion of Template:Solicit then inform ==

]] has been ]. You are invited to comment on the discussion at ].<!--Template:Tfdnotice--> <span style="color:green">'''Ten Pound Hammer'''</span> • <sup>(])</sup> 03:57, 5 June 2017 (UTC)
==Assume good faith during RFA==
Hello ] : - ) I think that you need to ] in regard to people voicing their opinions during RFA. Your voting stacking comment is troubling to me. I saw several comments that you made on a Misplaced Pages IRC channel during your own RFA that lead me to believe that you were critical of the people giving their opinions. I ignored them at the time, but wonder if we need to talk about this to clear the air. Not meaning to pressure you to discuss this if you do not want to discuss it. Want to let you know that I'm avaialbe to discuss this if you think it would be helpful. Take care, ] ] 21:35, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
:If you would be interested in discussing it, I would be willing. Is here fine, or would you prefer this to be private? I don't have any problem with people voicing their opinions per se, but as I've stated in various places, I view various discussions as a means of determining community consensus, and consequently I find attempts to skew the demographics of such a discussion (and thereby the outcome) troubling. My suggestion at RFA talk just now about jury voting is largely how I think such things should be worked out; allow anyone to discuss, but keep in mind that they might not be representative of the community. I do realize that some disagree, but I was still somewhat upset that by all appearances, a major contributory factor to my RFA's failure may have been due to someone's attempt to invite many opposers who would not otherwise have commented, yes.<p>I don't believe I've failed to assume good faith. Whoever contacted those of my opposers who were contacted (you know that there was such contact?) was undoubtedly acting in good faith, I just strongly disagree with his or her good-faith action. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 21:43, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
:We need to talk in private. I'm on IRC now. Or we can talk later. ] ] 21:50, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
::I'm always on IRC when I'm on the computer (otherwise I just idle). I don't see anyone with nick FloNight on freenode. My nick is Simetrical, you can message me. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 21:55, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
:::My nicks Poore5. ] ] 21:57, 1 August 2006 (UTC)

==Correct image tag==
I am the executor and sole legatee of all intellectual properties of a late photographer who was in his nineties when he died. What would be the proper tag for a cc image on en.Misplaced Pages or the commons? So what are the appropriate tags for photographs that I did not take, but for which I own the copyright and wish to release with attribution? All suggestions appreciated. Thanks ] &#9836; ] 02:41, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
:Just use a tag like {{tl|cc-by-sa-2.5}} (or if you prefer attribution-only, {{tl|cc-by-2.5}}), and explain in the text that you have legal ownership of the copyright. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 14:41, 2 August 2006 (UTC)

== Missing person ==

Thank you or your answer. So yo say that as the person is missing then thewhole intention is to diseminate the image as far and as wide as possible.--] 11:34, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
:Well, yes, but it's best not to rely on that rationale too heavily (what if they suddenly turn up? or in the case of ], what if they're believed dead?). The image should be used under our regular ] policy, as ] is. The basic answer to your question is that an image is not fair game just because it's released by the police, and it should be used only under our fair-use policy. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 14:47, 2 August 2006 (UTC)

== nature of consensus, from RFA Talk ==

:You wrote: ''I strongly disagree that that's a part of the ideal of consensus. Consensus is of the entire community, not just of people who happen to be there. The people who happen to be there may be better-suited to make the decision . . . or they may be just the opposite.''
I appreciate that you disagree, but one of the reasons consensus (in the real world sense, not the "rough consensus" bastardization we get here) is supposed to work is because instead of relying on quorums, procedures, and ], it tries to discern the best possible answer available to/for the group. The more people that are available to arrive at that consensus, the better the answer will be, but it never tries to say that '''everyone''' must take part. If we assume that people on RFA are working for the greater good of the encyclopedia, then they are well-suited to the task. People who don't show up at RFA may not have the impetus, or experience, or ''whatever'' to make the same decision. And they might, after all; that's the whole point! But changing it '''to''' a juried system without showing that there's a problem in the existing system, or that a randomized jury will be better, is premature IMO. Thanks for listening. -- '']']'' 17:40, 7 August 2006 (UTC)
:Well, first of all, rules need to be decided upon unless everyone is genuinely willing to compromise and accept when others disagree. That's the kind of circumstance you can maybe get some places, but not here: rules must exist to decide when not everyone agrees (thence the "rough consensus" bastardization we get here, which is largely voting in different words). Second of all, I disagree with the idea that RFA regulars are better-suited to the task than others; I think they're probably a bit worse-suited to the task if anything, for the reasons I explained.<p>Regardless, I've decided that pursuing ] would be a more productive path, and a better solution in any case if a choice had to be made between them. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 19:50, 7 August 2006 (UTC)

== ] ==

You added a line to this template saying that it doesn't apply in the United States. Can you provide a reason why you think this is true? And if so does this apply to all the other PD-OTHER COUNTRY templates? ]<sup>] ]</sup> 18:12, 8 August 2006 (UTC)
:See for the durations of copyright under US law. For instance, read through (it's fairly short) to verify that there's no mention of the source country having any effect on US copyright duration. This is noted at ]. And yes, this affects every PD-OTHER COUNTRY template. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 18:56, 8 August 2006 (UTC)

== Developer-in-training ==

Since we're on the same boat, both learning to code MediaWiki gradually, have you figured out how to make new Special pages yet? I've spent the last day trying to make a Special page extending ] (to test if sysop/bureaucrat granting and removal of a <tt>validate</tt> flag would be possible), but I haven't had much luck yet hooking up the page to MediaWiki... any tips? ]]<sup>(])</sup> 21:48, 8 August 2006 (UTC)
:I can't say I've ever tried to make a special page, so no. You've taken a look at the Patrol extension, MakeBot, MakeSysop, etc.? —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 22:18, 8 August 2006 (UTC)

== ]'s ] ==

<div class="boilerplate metadata rfa" style="background-color: #fff5f5; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px solid red;">
{|
|-
|]
|valign=top|Hi Simetrical!<br /><br />Thank you for taking part in ]! Unfortunately, it ended with a final result of '''(62/23/7)''', and with only '''73%''' support, no consensus was achieved. Nevertheless, I'd like to thank you again for your support and I'll continue my work as a vandal fighter. :)<br /><br /><div align="right"><strong>&nbsp;].]]</strong> 02:08, 9 August 2006 (UTC)</div>
|}
</div>

== Fair use is the exception, not the rule ==

"Misplaced Pages, the 💕" means that we are an encyclopedia of ''''']''''', not copyright infringements of other people's works. ] YouTube. This is a ] and if you cannot comply with this, you must leave. <span class="ipa">]]</span> 02:22, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
:I assume you this because you realized that I agree with Kelly's interpretation of fair-use policy and was with respect to Cyde saying that a fork that didn't have copyright policies as strict as ours would be sued out of existence, yes? —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 02:35, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
::Yes, I was confused about who was saying what where; sorry for that. It's still a useful thing to remind people of when they ignore our copyright policies though. <span class="ipa">]]</span> 02:44, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
:::Agreed. Sometime I'm probably going to propose we rename ] to something like ] to avoid people saying "But it's ]!" —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 02:52, 11 August 2006 (UTC)

== Custom TOC ==

Hello. I'd like to ask you about your TOC edit on the ] page last night. In all my research I was unable to find any protocol for or against a 'custom TOC' - only against modifying sub-headings - and you are the first to complain. The abbreviated TOC was doing no ill to the page, nor to any inter-wiki navigation, but by the tone of your comment there must be some specific rule somewhere, so please tell me - what have I missed? Thanks. <font face="Futura, Helvetica, _sans">]</font> 11:27, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
:My summary was "Do *not* use custom TOCs. They're uniform for a reason. If you think it looks better to only have the first-level headings for long articles, please bring it up on the village pump and do it sitewide." I did think there was a guideline that essentially said "don't override defaults except with good reason", or else I wouldn't have been so forceful. I ''was'' partially right, in that ] says<blockquote>Formatting issues such as font size, blank space and color are issues for the Misplaced Pages site-wide ] and should not be dealt with in articles except in special cases.</blockquote>This would suggest that at least the small size is frowned upon by guidelines. The arguments should apply equally to a custom TOC in general; I've started a discussion at ]. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 17:57, 14 August 2006 (UTC)

:: Aha, okay. Entendu. I for one would like to join in that discussion. What better way to find indication of a road to better style than to examine a Wikipedian's ways of improving/dealing with/bypassing present design shortcomings? I'm sure this would be a popular discussion were it made public enough. Thanks for the explanation, and cheers. <font face="Futura, Helvetica, _sans">]</font> 19:01, 14 August 2006 (UTC)

== Regarding ==New Section On Article Content Policy== ==

How is it a minefield?] 02:36, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
:The entire issue of ] is extremely contentious and raises passions on both sides. And in the future, please don't message me on my talk page in response to something I've put on another talk page (as I say at ]). Thanks. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 02:51, 22 August 2006 (UTC)

== PDF icons ==

There are Free icon alternatives, which are actually better looking anyway. I also think we can mesh this CSS change with the {{tl|PDFlink}} template for mutual benefit. See ] and ]. — ] 23:20, 23 August 2006 (UTC)

== dyk ==

{| class="messagebox standard-talk"
|-
|]
|On ], ], ''']''' was updated with a fact from the article ''''']''''', which you created. If you know of another interesting fact from a recently created article, then please suggest it on the ].
|} <!-- ], ] --> --''']''' <nowiki>|</nowiki> ] 00:21, 24 August 2006 (UTC)


== ArbCom 2018 election voter message ==
==No one is really that stupid...==
disagrees. ] 11:45, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
:Okay, but Google killed it better than anyone could using Misplaced Pages. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 22:24, 25 August 2006 (UTC)


{{Ivmbox|Hello, Simetrical. Voting in the ''']''' is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 3 December. All users who registered an account before Sunday, 28 October 2018, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Thursday, 1 November 2018 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
== US government portraits ==


The ] is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the ]. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose ], ], editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The ] describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
Greetings. Back in May, you commented at ]. The issue has lain dormant for over two months, and is still unresolved. I have attempted to summarize the findings of fact, in the hopes of resolving this debate. Your comments ] would be welcome. All the best, &ndash; ] <sup>(]) (])</sup> 17:05, 29 August 2006 (UTC)


If you wish to participate in the 2018 election, please review ] and submit your choices on the ''']'''. ] (]) 18:42, 19 November 2018 (UTC)
== re: ] ==
|Scale of justice 2.svg|imagesize=40px}}
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== Nomination of ] for deletion ==
<div class="afd-notice">
<div class="floatleft" style="margin-bottom:0">]</div>A discussion is taking place as to whether the article ] is suitable for inclusion in Misplaced Pages according to ] or whether it should be ].


The article will be discussed at ''']''' until a consensus is reached, and anyone, including you, is welcome to contribute to the discussion. The nomination will explain the policies and guidelines which are of concern. The discussion focuses on high-quality evidence and our policies and guidelines.
I just saw the change you made to ]. What was the point of that edit? The text, format, layout, content, everything were identical before and after the change. All you seem to have done is to very slightly slow down the loadtime of the page by making the server call the template in addition to the page. What purpose is that template supposed to serve? ] <small>]</small> 04:22, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
:#If it's ever decided to change the format for two-other-uses disambigs, or decided that only one other use should ever be in the hatnote, or whatever, then it will be possible to make the changeover in a systematic fashion.
:#It's not exactly the same: it added &lt;div class="dablink">, which will affect display (it won't be printed).
:#It teaches new editors about the existence of the template, so they'll be more likely to add disambigs in a consistent fashion rather than misremembering some of the punctuation or what have you.
:Overall, it's the standard advantages of ]. Load time is extremely unlikely to be an issue, although you could always benchmark stuff if you felt like it. —] (]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]) 21:42, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
==Redirect Bill O'Reilly to Bill O'Reilly (commentator)==
Hi sorry to bother you but I started a new vote to have 'bill oreilly' routed ].] 07:36, 22 September 2006 (UTC)


Users may edit the article during the discussion, including to improve the article to address concerns raised in the discussion. However, do not remove the article-for-deletion notice from the top of the article until the discussion has finished.<!-- Template:Afd notice --></div> ] <sup style="color:black">]</sup> 13:44, 12 May 2024 (UTC)
I was quite serious - thanks for saving me from myself. I'm too quick to reply to provocative statements, and that's what gets me into trouble. ] 13:27, 26 September 2006 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 13:44, 12 May 2024

Macross series
Franchise
Video games
Characters
Universe
Production
Music
Related

al/Archive]]

== Re: [[Tempee You asked me to unprotect the template so you could make some changes to it. Just reminding you that I did reduce it to semi-protection, so whenever you get around to making your changes... Later. — Jul. 1, '06 <freak|talk>

Editing of "Colgate University" page

I received a message from you that I edited the Colgate University page, and the edit was vandalism. I must let you know, however, that I was incorrectly identified through the IP address. All computers on the Colgate networked are masked under a small number (less than 10) IP addresses, so it could have been any other of the 3500 computer users on this campus. Not your fault, but I just wanted to let you know.

"Custom TOCs"

Hello, the law page looks a bit odd with a long blank space, because there's a short introduction and lots of content categories. Surely that counts as a good reason to deviate from the wikimanual you referred to when responding to the other person's complaint about this in August. I imagine wikimanuals are there for guidance on the more wild and undeveloped pages, where people fiddle with the style all the time and do little with substance. Best wishes. User:Wikidea

editsection stylesheet

Hello, I've investigated a problem with the display of the links (next to the title of each paragraph) when there is more than one object (usually image) with "float" parameter in the preceding paragraph. In this case (using FF) the link does not appear on the same height as the title of the paragraph - but on the same height as the lowest floating preceding object - which apparently is the exact behavior specified in CSS 2.0. I think I have a solution, and I came to talk to you about it in advise of user:rotemliss on the Hebrew[REDACTED] - who said you take care of this aspect. The solution is pretty simple, instead of having the editsection CSS (on /skins-1.5/common/shared.css) defined as -

.editsection {
	float: right;
	margin-left: 5px;
}

set it to -

.editsection {
    display: block;
    text-align: right;
    position: relative;
}

("text-align: left;" on RTL projects). In this setup the link would always be in-line with the paragraph title, and lined to the top of the title - this works good on FF, and IE as far as I've checked, so if there are nothing I've missed I don't see a reason why not to replace it. תודה, Costello (talk) 20:27, 4 January 2008 (UTC)

This was tried, I reversed it. I observed distinctly different appearance in other browsers (e.g., old versions of IE). Specifically, it shifts up by somewhat different amounts in different browsers, whatever you shift it up by. (I assume you left out the "top: 1.2em" or similar statement.) For discussion of the issue, you can read bug 1629. I do plan to fix this, the question is only when. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 04:27, 6 January 2008 (UTC)

You're invited!

...to the next New York City Meetup!

New York City Meetup


Next: Sunday January 13th, Columbia University area
Last: 11/3/2007
This box: view • talk • edit

In the morning, there are exciting plans for a behind-the-scenes guided tour of the American Museum of Natural History.

In the afternoon, we will hold a session dedicated to discussing meta:Wikimedia New York City issues (see the last meeting's minutes).

In the evening, we'll share dinner and chat at a local restaurant, and (weather permitting) hold a late-night astronomy event at Columbia's telescopes.

You can add or remove your name from the New York City Meetups invite list at Misplaced Pages:Meetup/NYC/Invite list.
This has been an automated delivery by BrownBot (talk) 01:29, 5 January 2008 (UTC)

Revision when rollbacker was implemented

Hi there. Hope the little debate we had yesterday wasn't too exhausting! :-) I was wondering if you would be able to point me towards the actual revision that implemented rollbacker? The impression I get from the "shell" stuff is that the switch is in some en-wiki specific thing, and that globally (for all the projects) the ability to turn on this new user right was available earlier. One of the points (I think) is that this software change wasn't available at the time of the earlier poll. I do remember seeing some talk somewhere about how some clunky patch that was used to change user rights had been made redundant by some change - was it this change that also allowed the rollbacker thing to go ahead? Any pointers would be much appreciated. Carcharoth (talk) 13:22, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

There are two separate concepts here that a lot of people get confused. One type of access you can have is to commit changes to the Subversion repository. This repository contains almost all the code used for running the site. Changes made here do not take effect immediately. Users with just commit access cannot do anything at all to the servers by themselves.

The other type of access you can have is shell access, i.e., more or less full access to the servers (possibly restricted somewhat so that you can't seriously disrupt the system). Shell users can run programs and store files and so on on the servers if they want, but the more relevant thing is that they are given the permission to change various configuration settings, they can update the code that's running on the servers to the latest version from Subversion (or any other version), and some (maybe all, I don't know, but at least all the roots) have direct access to the database. These things are not kept in Subversion, cannot be changed by people with only commit access, and are not publicly viewable. Therefore there is no revision to link you to.

I refer to developers and sysadmins separately, by the way, because the two groups are not only quite different in their rights, but they don't fully overlap. Sysadmins like JeLuF may have commit access, but in practice they never use it. They might not be familiar with the MediaWiki code, they might not even be familiar with programming at all beyond simple scripts. They therefore can't add new features to the software, and perhaps more importantly, they can't review things like new extensions. The two main sysadmins who are also developers are Brion Vibber and Tim Starling. (Other active or semi-active sysadmins can also write code, like Domas and River, but they don't presently tend to add new features to the software, or review them.)

As for the software change: up until a few months ago, there was no reasonable way for user-rights assignment to be given out on a modular basis. Either you were a steward and could change all rights however you wanted on Special:Userrights, or you could change nothing. When, in days of yore, it was perceived this was a little inflexible, someone coded up a totally different page, Special:Makesysop, and gave it a special right so that bureaucrats could use it. Later, stewards were having to field an excessive number of bot addition/removal requests, and there was quite a bit of lag involved (this was true until maybe a year ago, I think), and so Rob Church coded up yet another entirely different special page, Special:Makebot. What this meant is that if you wanted to create a rollbacker group, you would have to get a developer to write an entire extension for you, and it would have to be checked over and enabled by one of the two active developer/sysadmins I mentioned for reasonableness.

So several months ago, I changed Special:Userrights so any group could be easily configured to have limited access to it, for instance only to grant sysop, bureaucrat, and bot and to remove bot. None of the sysadmins used it that I know of, however, until a short while ago, when Werdna improved it further (by adjusting interwiki rights-granting, etc.). Now it is possible for any group to be given the right to add or remove any other group, and quite a few long-standing shell requests can be fulfilled (plus Makesysop and Makebot will be obsoleted once the Userrights interface is cleaned up a bit more). So when this was previously discussed, no, it could not have been implemented. It's only possible within the past few weeks. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 19:06, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

Wow! Thanks for all that. I feel like I know how things work around here now! :-) I knew some of this already, but some of it I didn't know, or had forgotten. You may not be aware, but Doc Glasgow (following a suggestion by Jimbo) has filed an arbitration case to clear up the issue of consensus. I'm not sure how clued-up the Arbitration Committee are on what you just said above, so maybe you might want to post something over at WP:RFARB to provide the background? Just add a statement and type away (not sure if you know how that system works). Carcharoth (talk) 01:47, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
I have participated in ArbCom proceedings before on occasion. I imagine that there are people on the ArbCom who understand well enough how things work, and if not I'm sure they'll have the sense to ask if they're unsure. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 17:59, 11 January 2008 (UTC)

Request for comment on main page deletion incident

As you made an edit to the incident listed in the Administrators notice board, it is requested that you confirm the details of the incident here (section 1.1.2)

This is as the incident is used as the basis of an argument and needs to be confirm by persons familar with the event

Regards --User:Mitrebox talk 2008-02-22 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.11.244.78 (talk) 07:57, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

New mailing list

There has been a mailing list created for Wikipedians in the New York metropolitan area (list: Wikimedia NYC). Please consider joining it! Cbrown1023 talk 21:39, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

You are invited!

New York City Meetup


Next: Sunday March 16th, Columbia University area
Last: 1/13/2008
This box: view • talk • edit

In the afternoon, we will hold a session dedicated to meta:Wikimedia New York City activities, and have salon-style group discussions on Misplaced Pages and the other Wikimedia projects (see the last meeting's minutes).

Well also make preparations for our exciting Misplaced Pages Takes Manhattan event, a free content photography contest for Columbia University students planned for Friday March 28 (about 2 weeks after our meeting).

In the evening, we'll share dinner and chat at a local restaurant, and (weather permitting) hold a late-night astronomy event at Columbia's telescopes.

You can add or remove your name from the New York City Meetups invite list at Misplaced Pages:Meetup/NYC/Invite list.

You're also invited to subscribe to the public Wikimedia New York City mailing list, which is a great way to receive timely updates.
This has been an automated delivery because you were on the invite list. BrownBot (talk) 03:32, 4 March 2008 (UTC)

Discovered attack

The convention that the Chess Wikiproject uses is to put the "chess notation" tag at the top of the article. Bubba73 (talk), 15:32, 17 April 2008 (UTC)

On refs with missing closing tags

The literal string "<ref>" could legitimately occur in a reference's text. --Random832 (contribs) 03:37, 24 April 2008 (UTC)

I didn't say it was probable on the English Misplaced Pages. There's no intrinsic reason it's nonsensical, however. It might be worthwhile to assume it's not intended, however, since it seems to be much more likely in most circumstances that you left off the ending tag, I agree. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 16:04, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
Well, the other thing is, there's a difference between <ref> showing up unescaped, and &lt;ref&gt; - and since you can't have references within references (arguably a bug), you should really be using the latter anyway. --Random832 (contribs) 16:20, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
Yes, that's true. If <nowiki>, <pre>, and entity escaping all worked to avoid the error message, it would probably be fine. I even once wrote a patch to that effect and attached it to a bug somewhere, before I got commit access. It might still work today (but probably not, with the addition of groups). —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 17:14, 24 April 2008 (UTC)

TfD nomination of Template:FootnotesSmall

Template:FootnotesSmall has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for Deletion page. Thank you. — Rockfang (talk) 08:01, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

NYC Meetup: June 1, 2008

New York City Meetup


Next: Sunday June 1st, Columbia University area
Last: 3/16/2008
This box: view • talk • edit

In the afternoon, we will hold a session dedicated to meta:Wikimedia New York City activities, elect a board of directors, and hold salon-style group discussions on Misplaced Pages and the other Wikimedia projects (see the last meeting's minutes).

We'll also review our recent Misplaced Pages Takes Manhattan event, and make preparations for our exciting successor Wiki Week bonanza, being planned with Columbia University students for September or October.

In the evening, we'll share dinner and chat at a local restaurant, and (weather permitting) hold a late-night astronomy event at Columbia's telescopes.

You can add or remove your name from the New York City Meetups invite list at Misplaced Pages:Meetup/NYC/Invite list.

Also, check out our regional US Wikimedia chapters blog Wiki Northeast (and we're open to guest posts).
This has been an automated delivery by BrownBot (talk) 00:39, 20 May 2008 (UTC)

wikibits.js

There are several proposals for changes to wikibits.js, here. Could you offer some guidance on how best to prepare the proposals for submission to bugzilla? Thanks! SharkD (talk) 21:48, 18 August 2008 (UTC)

File one bug per issue. Make sure patches are in unified diff format against the current version of wikibits.js. Ideally, prepare patches by checking out a copy of MediaWiki (or just phase3/skins/common/ if you like) and using the command "svn diff", or "Create patch" (something like that) in TortoiseSVN. Attach the patch to the bug report, and give an explanation of what it does and why in the report itself. If you want to commit performance improvements, make sure you know that they're actually a performance improvement. Set the "assignee" to Simetrical+wikibugs@gmail.com. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 23:21, 18 August 2008 (UTC)

If I submit them all at today will it cause problems? I mean, will the software be able to apply several patches that all branch from the same, initial version? Or, should I wait until the first patch has been accepted before submitting the next? SharkD (talk) 00:59, 19 August 2008 (UTC)
As long as multiple patches don't change the same lines of code, or immediately adjacent ones, they should apply cleanly. If two changes do change the same lines of code, consider submitting them as one patch in one bug report, even if they're unrelated. Alternatively, just submit them separately, it shouldn't be hard to manually resolve any conflicts. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 15:21, 19 August 2008 (UTC)
OK, thanks. SharkD (talk) 16:52, 20 August 2008 (UTC)

nstab-main

Hey, could you take a look at the discussion at Misplaced Pages:Village pump (technical)#nstab-main and tell us what you think? —Remember the dot 06:11, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

Alright, if you're not interested in the discussion that's fine. Would you consider taking a look at bugzilla:15507, at least? I made a patch to fix the issue, but no one has looked at it. —Remember the dot 20:55, 12 September 2008 (UTC)

Go to BetaWiki or someplace and talk to the Spanish and French translators. I don't know either language and am not going to commit changes to their localizations. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 21:10, 12 September 2008 (UTC)

Thanks for pointing me in the right direction! I see you've beaten me to closing bug 15507, so thanks doubly. —Remember the dot 23:14, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
I didn't close it, Siebrand did. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 00:15, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
Whoops. You're right. Thanks anyway. —Remember the dot 23:29, 15 September 2008 (UTC)

Category counts

In re this, your patch r40499 is live now and works good. I was able to view my test page and watch the cat counts get corrected (with some judicious null-edits). At least, it sure seems that way!

Did you go any further with the idea of a job to recount all categories? That seemed like a strictly server-side function, which is certainly beyond my scope. Seems like a good idea though... Franamax (talk) 01:25, 24 September 2008 (UTC)

You shouldn't need null edits. Just viewing the category page should do it. As for the job, really all that would be needed is for the sysadmins to regularly run populateCategory.php with a very low value of maxlag and/or a high throttle (and with --force so it repopulates even though the table is populated already). The script's already there, but I can't make it run, since I only have commit access, not shell access. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 14:15, 24 September 2008 (UTC)
Thanks! Viewing the cat page (I'm confident) updates the DB table. It seemed as though the null edits were needed to force an update on the page containing the PAGESINCATEGORY parser function. Would your count-update patch force updates onto the job queue for pages containing the parser function? I'm guessing no, since I don't see any way to obtain backlinks for parser functions - so it seems to me, the function-containing page will remain static. Though I'm now confused - if PIC is on a page, does that mean the page is dynamically regenerated every time it's accessed?
I did see a bit of tricky code UltraExactZZ uses to force an update on rendering his upage, see "fullurl:Category:Spam pages for speedy deletion|action=purge" therein - but I'm still confused on whether the page is dynamically rendered - does this mean UE's page never hits cache, by virtue of the PAGESINCAT function?
My confusion aside, who would be a good admin to push about setting up the job you describe? At least getting a one-time run? I see Brion has had only 17 or so server crashes to deal with in the last few days, would that be the first stop?
And I may try to update some doc's to reflect the latest changes - would you like to see diff's of same? Franamax (talk) 00:21, 25 September 2008 (UTC)
PAGESINCATEGORY just isn't updated until the page is reparsed. There are no backlinks, as you point out, so it's not possible to figure out which pages to regenerate on update; even if it were, invalidating the parser cache of bajillions of pages every time something is added to/removed from a category isn't really acceptable. The parser function is always going to be lagged, possibly by days, so it's not really useful for fine-grained tracking. For that purpose, visit the category page, or use a script.

You might try talking to Brion or Tim if you want the script run, I suppose. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 01:09, 25 September 2008 (UTC)

TfD nomination of Template:!vote

Template:!vote has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for Deletion page. Thank you. Thinboy00 @076, i.e. 00:49, 3 December 2008 (UTC)

Quaternions / finite dimensional division rings

Regarding your recent edit to quaternion, I'm wondering whether I'm understanding it correctly; maybe it's just a terminology issue, but since octonions, quaternions, and complex numbers all have the reals as proper subrings, there should be three division rings (and not two, per your edit)? Thanks, Jens Koeplinger (talk) 02:30, 15 December 2008 (UTC)

Ah - just noticed that associativity of multiplication is typically part of a ring. Never mind. Thanks, Jens Koeplinger (talk) 02:38, 15 December 2008 (UTC)
I just asked "so what are the other two?" when I read that sentence, clicked through to Frobenius theorem (real division algebras), and added the one other nontrivial one listed there. Unless I'm grossly misunderstanding that article, if I'm wrong then it's wrong too. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 02:44, 15 December 2008 (UTC)
Hi - the Frobenius theorem article is correct, it applies to associative division algebras. The octonions, in contrast, are a non-associative, finite-dimensional division algebra; and as I read here in Misplaced Pages, associativity of multiplication is typically included in the definition of a "ring", but it is also acknowledged here that alternate (though apparently less common) definitions exist, where associativity of multiplication in a ring is not required. That's what I had in mind. So, it's all good, no need to point this out in the quaternion article, I think. It was good for me to learn, though. Thanks, Jens Koeplinger (talk) 20:15, 15 December 2008 (UTC)

You maybe interested in the Article Rescue Squadron

Hello, Simetrical. Based on the templates on your talk page, please consider joining the Article Rescue Squadron. Rescue Squadron members are focused on rescuing articles from deletion, that might otherwise be lost forever. I think you will find our project matches your vision of Misplaced Pages. You can join >> here <<.

Ikip (talk) 15:34, 24 February 2009 (UTC)

{{pf}} update

Hi Simetrical, I just performed a massive update of {{pf}} that ended up deprecating {{cpf}}, so I redirected the latter. At some point after logging in, I intend to create a similar template for magic words (unless such a template already exists; I haven't searched for one yet), and I plan to tweak {{pf}} some more as well. Any thoughts? BTW, if you reply, could you please leave a {{tb}} on my talkpage? In all likelihood, I won't remember this when you do answer, or at least where it is. =P --Dinoguy1000 as 66.116.12.126 (talk) 08:32, 28 February 2009 (UTC)

I have no idea why you're saying this to me (I guess I contributed to {{pf}} at some point?). Do whatever you want. If you don't remember to check back here, that's just as well, so I haven't left a {{tb}}. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 01:11, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
According to its history, you created it (albiet in 2006). I just thought you might appreciate the heads-up, even if only for curiosity's sake, and even after such a length of time. And, while I'm sure you didn't intend it, your answer sounded more than a bit irritable (not to mention the possible consequences of a developer telling an anonymous IP address to "do whatever you want" =) ). --Dinoguy1000 as 66.116.12.126 (talk) 05:24, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
Yes, sorry, I was a bit confused. I vaguely remembered having something to do with it, but I'm long past any desire to fiddle with Misplaced Pages's templates. Thanks for the heads-up anyway. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 12:46, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
No problem. In retrospect, though, considering the age of the templates, I probably should have clarified why I was notifying you, specifically. And, if you don't mind my asking, what turned you off to working on Misplaced Pages templates? --Dinoguy1000 as 66.116.12.126 (talk) 03:22, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
I have better things to do. Like schoolwork, running a decent-sized website, and developing MediaWiki. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 06:06, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
Aah, of course. =) Anything interesting or unusual happen on any of those fronts as of late? --Dinoguy1000 as 66.116.12.126 (talk) 08:01, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
You can check WP:SIGN for MediaWiki development news. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 15:02, 2 March 2009 (UTC)

About quoting claims that are apparently from Eben Moglen

Hi, be careful with quoting claims that are apparently from Eben Moglen. Moglen frequently publishes claims in the semi-public that are contradicting his view as lawyer. The same happened with me for cdrtools. I have a private statement from Eben Moglen that there of course is no license problem in cdrtools. After Moglen send me this statement, he aborted his license review for Shuttleworth. Please correct the cdrtools page.... Schily (talk) 12:44, 11 March 2009 (UTC)

I provided what I believe to be a reliable source for the citation. My source is an official publication of the Ubuntu Technical Board that indicates that they believe they were acting under Eben Moglen's advice. If you have another reliable source that contradicts that assertion, please provide it. If you have unverifiable personal knowledge, that's not relevant to Misplaced Pages's discussion of the topic. Only reliable sources that can be verified by our readers are acceptable for consideration in writing Misplaced Pages articles. If you do indeed have such a communication from Eben Moglen, I suggest you ask him to make a public statement on the matter that can be cited in the article. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 14:13, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
You do not have a reliable source but POV claims from some people only. It is simple for me to create a page that claims the opposite to what you found, the current claim is therefore not verifiable. POV statemens do not belong on WP, please remove it. Schily (talk) 14:23, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
Except that any page you create stating an opposite would fail WP:RS and thus would be unusable on Misplaced Pages. Simetrical's source is reliable because it's a statement (or rather, a meeting transcription) from Ubuntu concerning a stated fact about them - therefore, that fact is verified. There is no issue here, you appear to simply be trying to cause trouble. 「ダイノガイ?!」 18:45, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
WP:AGF, please. I'm sure he believes he's correct and is trying to improve the accuracy of the article. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 22:30, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
My source clearly states the POV of a particular organization. "cdrtools cannot be legally distributed" would be a POV statement; "Ubuntu believes that cdrtools cannot be legally distributed" is NPOV. If you can find other notable parties that believe cdrtools can be legally distributed, you can feel free to add those to the article. I'm not aware of any significant ones other than Schilling himself. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 22:30, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
All openminded parties believe that cdrtools can be legally distributed. This includes e.g. Sun (Sun legal did do an in depth legal review for cdrtools last Autumn and Sun lagel did give an OK) Slackware and others. I am not sure about the intention of Ubuntu as Mark Shuttleworth did break his promise about including cdrtools in Ubunto after Eben Moglen aborted his legal review for cdrtools. It is unlikely that Ubuntu does this because they believe, there is a legal problem; Ubuntu still happily distributes other software with definite legal problems. Cdrkit, GNUvcdimager and libcdio are all based on code from cdrtools and they are all in conflict with GPL and the Copyright and thus cannot be legally distributed. Ubuntu is informed about this problem but ignores it.
Besides Ubuntu, we curently mainly have two companies that only like to ship the undistributable "cdrkit": SuSe still "believes" that their customers need all the bugs in wodim that prevent it from being used and that their customers would not accept a working original cdrecord. RedHATs role is not clear (RedHAT maintainers told me that RedHAT managers forbid to include CDDL code into REdHAT but it seems that RedHAT recently upgraded star to a CDDL based version).
Eben Moglens legal opinion is that there is no license problem in the original cdrtools. He intentionally did not publish an "advise" not to publish cdrtools because this seems to be an opinion from someone else - guess who :-) If Moglen did publish information from private discussions I would publish our private mail discussion without asking him to prove his real opinion. Publishing leaked private discussions taken from the Ubuntu IRC is not a good idea as the related content is in conflict with the agreement of most parties that there is no legal problem with distributing the original software. Schily (talk) 16:31, 12 March 2009 (UTC)
If Sun and Slackware have officially stated that they believe cdrtools to be distributable, or if they actually distribute it, you should add that fact to the article, with citations. "All open-minded parties" is not a NPOV description and cannot be put in the article. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 21:39, 12 March 2009 (UTC)
If POV cannot be in an article, why is there POV text in the article? All other facts I mentioned including the fact that Ubuntu does not care about legallity when publishing software are not POV and the latter fact would help to rate other claims. Schily (talk) 22:30, 12 March 2009 (UTC)
The statement "Ubuntu does not care about legality when publishing software" is not neutral. If you don't understand this, then I'm afraid there's not much point in discussing this further. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 23:57, 12 March 2009 (UTC)
Your current text in the article is not neutral with respect to the cdrtools project - it rather reports about the POV from Mark Shuttleworth and I believe that POV statements do not belong into this WP article. You may add this to the article about Shuttleworth if you like to add things just for curiosity. Do you have a problem to understand that Ubuntu is currently in a self contradicting state (they claim that they "cannot" publish cdrtools because of supposed license problem but at the same time they happily publish software that definitely has license problems -> the fork, libcdio and vcdimager)? Schily (talk) 11:10, 13 March 2009 (UTC)
As I said, it is clear by now that there is (unfortunately) no point in continuing this discussion. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 16:49, 13 March 2009 (UTC)

Image resizing daemon

Hi Simetrical
Since I've read you'll be mentoring the GSC project I've got a question/suggestion.
I find our handling of JPEG images a bit wanting. I'd think that ideally, we should convert all our uploaded JPEG files into a lossless format and store them as PNG instead. The thumbnailing process should then decide whether an image is best delivered as a PNG or JPG, depending on the image content. Ideally, that determination needs only be made once, and stored as some meta information with the picture.
There are two reasons behind all of this. First, we have a sizeable amount of photographs stored in a lossless format which should really be served as JPGs, to save both the users and servers the time and bandwith. Second, we would reduce the problem of generation loss, so it wouldn't be always necessary to start from the original and attempt to redo all previous steps just to get the best quality. Currently, some editors are uploading JPGs with only little compression, which somewhat works around the problem but has a bandwith impact if the fullsize image is displayed somewhere on an article where the uncompressed image will be served, and not a compressed thumbnail.
I assume that thumbnail format and image format are already somewhat decoupled, judging by what I read about TIFF support. I'm unsure how hard it would be to do so down to the specific images, but I think it would be beneficial. I could think of both quick&easy and hard&slower algorithms to determine whether a picture is best served as PNG or JPEG, and as I said this only has to be done once per image. And if we someday want to support more complex formats, like XCF (which might be possible if the conversion happens on seperate servers) that decoupling would certainly be helpful, too.
Amalthea 11:09, 28 April 2009 (UTC)

To be honest, I don't know so much about our image thumbnailing right now. Hopefully this summer will be an opportunity to clean it up somewhat, and while we do that, we can look at our options for long-standing feature requests like this. There are clearly cases in which conversion from PNG to JPEG during thumbnailing would be useful, even if the storage format isn't consistently lossless. But in any event, none of this is related to the actual GSoC project, which is fairly narrow in scope and doesn't necessarily have to touch MediaWiki itself at all. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 13:19, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
Ah, alright. Well, I'm happy if those possibilities are kept in mind (didn't know that was a "long-standing" request). I wasn't sure how integrated that dameon would be.
Thanks! Amalthea 13:34, 28 April 2009 (UTC)

PD-Status

Hi, I came accross {{PD-status}}, and was wondering if it is still useful/used in our current set of policies. If it's not, perhaps we should delete it ? —TheDJ (talkcontribs) 00:33, 4 May 2009 (UTC)

I have no idea. I haven't been involved with copyright in Misplaced Pages in a couple of years. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 13:38, 4 May 2009 (UTC)

ALT text hovering tooltip

Hi, I believe you added the MediaWiki software for ALT text in images late last year. Thanks from everyone at WP:ACCESS! Several of us were wondering if you could adjust the onmouseover hovering tooltip to reflect the ALT text, if it's defined. It seems redundant to have it just repeat the caption, although I see the point for captionless images such as the thumbnails on the Main Page. If you could make the tooltip work for images of math-mode equations, we'd be especially grateful. Thanks in advance! Proteins (talk) 17:20, 5 May 2009 (UTC)

Why would you want the alt text to be reflected in a tooltip as a general rule? —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 20:30, 5 May 2009 (UTC)

Thanks for your reply! Here are a few reasons. First, if the caption is visible (as is customary on Misplaced Pages), then having it appear again in the tooltip is redundant. Second, as mentioned here, sighted editors would like to be able to read the ALT text more easily, both for checking it and for better understanding the image itself. Although the ALT text is intended mainly to depict the image for those who can't see it, sometimes even sighted people benefit from cues as to what they should be looking at. They see, but they don't see. I often had that experience myself when I was first learning architecture; I would see the building, but I didn't really take it in. Having ALT text easily available is another avenue by which we can inform our readers more effectively.

Conveniently available math-mode ALT text would help lay-readers understand the formulae better, I believe. Not everyone will understand mathematical equations written in symbols, but some will understand them if they're translated into English. Not many formulae have ALT text, it's true, but I intend to push the mathematicians to include more ALT text, and I aspire to write an automated ALT-text generator for LaTeX formulae this summer.

The usual method of finding the ALT text on the image "Properties" isn't convenient if the ALT text is long, which may often be the case; the ALT text scrolls off the edge of the popup window. You may wish to also speak to qp10qp, a prominent editor in literature who would like to foster more ALT text. Proteins (talk) 02:49, 6 May 2009 (UTC)

Alt text has the purpose of allowing people with images off (because they're blind, or otherwise) to understand the content of the picture. Its purpose is not to help people who can see the image understand what they're supposed to be looking at. The alt text should say no more or less than you would get from a brief inspection of the image. If it says less, the alt text should be improved. If it says more, the extra info should be moved to the caption, where everyone will be able to see it. The caption is the correct place to point out important details that the viewer might have missed, and that info will then be available to anyone, whether they're viewing the image or the alt text. Putting extra info in the tooltip is bad for accessibility, because most people won't think to hover to get the tooltip. Automatically mirroring the alt text in the tooltip will encourage people to provide bad alt text, namely alt text that's too verbose and says more than the image does.
As for helping editors check it: info that's useful to editors should be displayed on the edit screen. It should not be visible to ordinary users, most of whom are not editors. If editors want to easily check the accuracy of alt text, it would be easy to write a Gadget that would display it inline next to every image, which is much more useful than requiring you to hover over it.
I agree that it's pointless to have the tooltip reflect a visible caption. If a caption is visible, then the tooltip should be empty unless separately specified (not that there's any way to do that currently, I don't think).
Math is a whole separate issue. As a mathematician (entering a Ph.D. program this fall) who does quite a lot of chatting in plain text over IRC, I have to say LaTeX is actually pretty good for comprehensible plain-text math. Trying to write complicated equations out accurately in English is impossible. It would be like trying to follow a math class without looking at the board, which I know from experience just doesn't work. You get capitals confused with lowercase, parentheses are hard to track even if they're explicitly stated (which they usually aren't), etc. The best way of conveying equations in plain text (barring ASCII art, which doesn't make good alt text for multiple reasons) is basically just LaTeX, with some of the excess formatting removed. E.g., if we take this equation from Heat equation:
q = k u {\displaystyle \mathbf {q} =-k\nabla u}
the alt text is:

\mathbf{q} = - k \nabla u

Good alt text would probably be "q = -k del u" or "q = -k gradient u". "q equals negative k times the gradient of u" would be very poor alt text, IMO. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 14:26, 6 May 2009 (UTC)

The Gadget idea for registered editors sounds great to me, although others might not agree. For me, the hovering tooltip was only one option of several for helping editors to review the ALT text. The redundancy of the caption in the tooltip does seem pointless, as you say, but if it can't be removed easily, then it's probably not worth fixing. I also agree that the ALT text should not say more than the image, although IMO there's an art to crafting good ALT text that says no more than the image but says it well and usefully, even for sighted editors. But I also suspect that most editors won't take such care in crafting ALT text.

I haven't thought through the math-mode issues, but speaking as a physics professor who's used LaTeX continually for over 20 years, I'm not convinced that it's the best option for ALT text. However, a slightly parsed version of it might work well, and wouldn't require much tweaking to program. We should probably collect more data on what would be most useful for different categories of Misplaced Pages's readers. In the example you give above, it's obvious to us two that q is a vector field and u is a scalar field, but that won't be obvious to most readers. Speaking for myself, I'm not willing to sacrifice the understanding of all the others. A well-written exposition in the main article would (try to) make the equations intelligible to lay-readers, but as I'm sure you know, such exposition is still rare on Misplaced Pages. So, in my view, English versions of mathematical equations can serve a purpose on Misplaced Pages. Proteins (talk) 01:06, 7 May 2009 (UTC)

I agree that most editors won't take a lot of care in crafting alt text. But that's okay; it's a wiki, so the people who know and care about good alt text can write it.

As for LaTeX, extra info on the equations might be useful, depending on the audience. (Extra explanation makes the material more useful to lay readers, but less useful to knowledgeable readers. I've read popular articles on mathematical research where it took me halfway through the article to even figure out what field of mathematics they were talking about . . .) But if it is useful, it needs to be in the article text, not in the alt text. I'm not sure what sort of alt text you'd like for math images, but it should be as faithful and readable a translation as possible, not add extra explanatory info.

I do agree that LaTeX isn't at all the best alt text, but it's actually pretty decent: mostly too ugly and complicated, is all. Incomprehensible to lay readers, of course, but then, I don't expect that most of the equations in a typical math/physics article (e.g., Homology (mathematics)) will make any sense to non-experts anyway. If it could be simplified, that would be great, of course, as long as it doesn't become significantly more ambiguous.

Anyway, I guess the pending requests boil down to:

  1. Don't duplicate caption in tooltip. There's probably not any need for tooltips at all on . . . well, basically any Misplaced Pages images. To stave off complaints, though, it might be best to add an extra tooltip= option for images in case people really want one. The code involving this needs to be refactored, it's kind of a mess . . .
  2. Better alt text for math images. This is probably doable pretty easily, but most of the relevant code is in Objective Caml as far as I know, so probably not something for the faint-hearted.

If there aren't bugs open for these, you might want to file some. —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 21:17, 7 May 2009 (UTC)

Missing paragraph found for Roman censor

3.5 years ago you pretty much built the Roman Censor article by adding the entry from William Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. The section on classes of punishable offenses described them as "threefold" but only discussed two. While wikifying the text you noticed this and added the comment "<!-- Huh? Only two listed -->"". Fortunately you did not change the word "threefold", so while reading the article today I noticed the discrepancy. I discovered that some online versions of Smith's Dictionary omit the second of three paragraphs, although the missing paragraph is present in many other online versions. I just finished adding it to the article. I'd be rather surprised if you remembered this ancient edit, but thought that you might be interested in hearing of a forgotten riddle's closure. -- Thinking of England (talk) 11:54, 21 June 2009 (UTC)

User:Simetrical/WikipediaSister

I took the liberty of making two small changes to your subpage User:Simetrical/WikipediaSister. The first change was the removal of an incorrect protection template, the second of a documentation page. Please see the edit summaries. I hope this is fine with you. If you have any questions, please write me on my talkpage. Debresser (talk) 14:15, 14 July 2009 (UTC)

Discussion on technical village pump about alt text

See this discussion on the village pump. Graham87 10:48, 19 September 2009 (UTC)

YYYY-MM-DD format; footnotes

FYI -- there is a discussion at as to whether or not to allow the use of the all-numeric YYYY-MM-DD format in footnotes/references.

I'm mentioning it to you in the event that you would like to join in the discussion or follow it, as I recognize that this is an issue you have been interested in in the past. Thanks.--Epeefleche (talk) 08:24, 30 September 2009 (UTC)

Entities

You might've noticed already, but named entities aren't actually output from wikimarkup. On most pages, there seem to be just two problematic entities, one from MediaWiki:Copyright and one from MonoBook.php. —Ms2ger (talk) 19:25, 12 November 2009 (UTC)

No, I hadn't noticed that, actually. That's a very interesting point – it could be a much better solution than changing the doctype. Thanks for the pointer! —Simetrical (talk • contribs) 17:25, 13 November 2009 (UTC)

Thank you for correcting me

Just wanted to say thanks for correcting me after I removed a discussion that I'd started (and had been resolved) on a talk page. I'd seen other people remove discussions from talk pages after they'd gotten old and become irrelevant and thought that was appropriate. I appreciate you pointing me to the page on[REDACTED] that explains not to do that , and talks about archiving, etc. Whenever I think I'm starting to know almost everything about editing on wikipedia, I find out just how wrong I am - and I appreciate greatly the people who point it out to me when I screw up! So thanks! Spiral5800 (talk) 06:12, 12 January 2010 (UTC)

web slice

I removed you're changes in this article. read the comment and use the talkpage(of the article) please ;) mabdul 18:25, 10 February 2010 (UTC)

mms://

Thanks for adding that to the default of MediaWiki. You rock! :) Take Care...NeutralHomerTalk22:50, 26 March 2010 (UTC)

ACCAPP-61

Account Approval, ACCAPP-61

The ball is now, apparently, in your court - please give me a shout on my talk if you need anything from me. Many thanks,  Chzz  ►  21:21, 10 April 2010 (UTC)

Sorted, thank you.  Chzz  ►  18:29, 11 April 2010 (UTC)
Resolved

You are now a Reviewer

Hello. Your account has been granted the "reviewer" userright, allowing you to review other users' edits on certain flagged pages. Pending changes, also known as flagged protection, is currently undergoing a two-month trial scheduled to end 15 August 2010.

Reviewers can review edits made by users who are not autoconfirmed to articles placed under pending changes. Pending changes is applied to only a small number of articles, similarly to how semi-protection is applied but in a more controlled way for the trial. The list of articles with pending changes awaiting review is located at Special:OldReviewedPages.

When reviewing, edits should be accepted if they are not obvious vandalism or BLP violations, and not clearly problematic in light of the reason given for protection (see Misplaced Pages:Reviewing process). More detailed documentation and guidelines can be found here.

If you do not want this userright, you may ask any administrator to remove it for you at any time. Courcelles (talk) 18:03, 19 June 2010 (UTC)

Datablification of infoboxes

You might be interested in Howcome's attempt. He has some IE<8-specific CSS, but I haven't been able to test in IE6. —Ms2ger (talk) 12:49, 21 June 2010 (UTC)

Your edit on LGBT and Judaism

No problem with this. You are, of course, correct in principle.Mzk1 (talk) 18:29, 12 July 2010 (UTC)

Inclupedia

I dug through the revision history of your userpage and read your comments about notability. I created the outline of a proposal here and here for addressing the notability issue. I wonder if there is a way for both the inclusionists and the deletionists to have their way. That is, Misplaced Pages can remain the way it is now, with the same rules on notability. But we can create another project, Inclupedia, that is like an extension of Misplaced Pages. That is, to use a programming analogy, it will be kind of as if someone wrote:

class Inclupedia extends Misplaced Pages {
    public nonNotableArticle = array ( ... );
    ...
}

That's strictly an analogy rather than actual code, but you get the idea. Inclupedia will have everything Misplaced Pages has, and more. If a revision is made to Misplaced Pages, it will be mirrored to Inclupedia through the backend. And ideally the way this should work is that if a revision is made to, say, the cat article on Inclupedia, that revision should be added to the article revision history at Misplaced Pages, provided that Inclupedia user isn't blocked on Misplaced Pages (in which case, he will be blocked from making such a revision on Inclupedia as well, because the top-level revision of an Inclupedia article that exists on Misplaced Pages is supposed to always be the same as Misplaced Pages's top-level revision for that article). On the other hand, suppose the non-notable article Foofy (dog belonging to John Smith) is edited at Inclupedia. That revision won't respawn on Misplaced Pages, because the article doesn't exist on Misplaced Pages.

You've been around longer than I have. Does a wiki for non-notable topics have a chance in heck of getting implemented within the Wikimedia umbrella? And if not, is there any way to overcome the technical difficulties of creating an up-to-date Misplaced Pages mirror? (Because whatever else Inclupedia is, it's built on the foundation of an up-to-date Misplaced Pages mirror.) Replag and such seem like possible hindrances. But maybe it could be dealt with by getting the recent changes periodically, throwing the recent changes metadata for any un-updated items in a database table, and then polling every so often to see if the full data for those revisions are available. Ugh, it is probably going to be a lot uglier than using the backend, though. Thanks, Tisane /stalk 21:48, 25 July 2010 (UTC)

On a technical level, you'd really want to do this by just using the same database, and hiding the non-notable stuff (including links to non-notable pages, etc.) from the people who don't want to see it. But I think this is really a technical solution to a social problem. I don't expect it will be accepted. I don't think there will be any solution short of intervention by the Wikimedia Foundation. I predict that Wikimedia will begin to take a more active role in running the projects in coming years, with at least some communities becoming severely dysfunctional while Wikimedia becomes larger and wealthier. The best possible result of this would be to impose a sane decision-making structure on Misplaced Pages, where a small group can make informed decisions that are actually respected. Wikimedia has only done this in a few places, like copyright and BLP, but I expect there will be more to come.

For the time being, I'd give it up. There's no way to push for change on Misplaced Pages, when you have to convince a supermajority of hundreds of people who probably won't even read your arguments. The policy-making structure here may as well have been explicitly designed to promote reactionism. The only editorial or administrative policies that can succeed are the ones that everyone agrees with to begin with, because the editors and admins will just ignore them if they don't agree. The only areas where real change can currently occur are technical things, where the result of a decision can be imposed regardless of community support. —Aryeh Gregor (talk • contribs) 15:06, 26 July 2010 (UTC)

Revert in HTML5 video

You reverted the entry published on 10:18, 10 August 2010 without any further notification? Why? You think it don't meet the WP:EL? Ohter external links provided with the articel may? Don't think so!! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 217.235.35.77 (talkcontribs) 18:26, 14 August 2010

You're right, so I've removed all the other external links that endorse particular wrapper software. There are too many of them for us to reasonably mention all of them, and I don't see any particular way to figure out which are the best or most useful. The general guides we link to (from reputable and significant sources) should be enough. —Aryeh Gregor (talk • contribs) 16:48, 15 August 2010 (UTC)

Misplaced Pages:Pending changes/Straw poll on interim usage

Hi. As you recently commented in the straw poll regarding the ongoing usage and trial of Pending changes, this is to notify you that there is an interim straw poll with regard to keeping the tool switched on or switching it off while improvements are worked on and due for release on November 9, 2010. This new poll is only in regard to this issue and sets no precedent for any future usage. Your input on this issue is greatly appreciated. Off2riorob (talk) 23:48, 20 September 2010 (UTC)

Nomination for deletion of Template:Two other uses

Template:Two other uses has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Thank you. Magioladitis (talk) 06:34, 16 October 2010 (UTC)

Alphabetical ordering

Hi, I see over at MediaWiki that you're working on a solution to the age-old alphabetical ordering problem, which is greatly encouraging. Any idea when something might be ready to try out? What kind of help (if any) would you need regarding the sort rules for particular foreign alphabets?--Kotniski (talk) 13:23, 7 January 2011 (UTC)

I wrote a framework that theoretically allows category sort to work non-ASCIIbetically, but it's missing the part that actually does language-specific sorting. It just ASCII uppercases everything, so sort is case-insensitive for English, but that's about it. The remaining steps are pretty well-defined, since there are well-known algorithms (ICU, CLDR) to generate sort keys for various languages, so there's not much to help with unless you're willing to do the actual coding. Tim Starling mentioned in #mediawiki in the last day that he was looking at it. It might be finished and deployed within a month or two, with any luck. —Aryeh Gregor (talk • contribs) 17:57, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
That's good to know, thanks. Any chance of this being extended to correctly alphabetize the overall list of article titles at Special:PrefixIndex and Special:AllPages?--Kotniski (talk) 18:02, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
The current system only works for category pages. Theoretically it could be extended to other lists, but I don't know of any specific plans to do that. —Aryeh Gregor (talk • contribs) 18:05, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
OK, thanks, well good to know progress is being made overall.--Kotniski (talk) 18:13, 7 January 2011 (UTC)

Nomination for deletion of Template:Fact since

Template:Fact since has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Thank you. Mhiji 23:07, 10 January 2011 (UTC)

Nomination for merging of Template:Section template list

Template:Section template list has been nominated for merging with Template:Hatnote templates documentation. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Thank you. -DePiep (talk) 21:23, 23 January 2011 (UTC)

Tables on MediaWiki wikis, and border="1"

Hey Simetrical. I saw some of your contributions to discussions elsewhere concerning HTML 5, tables, and border="1". I would appreciate your participation in this discussion: MediaWiki talk:Common.js#Border="1". --Timeshifter (talk) 18:31, 17 November 2011 (UTC)

I haven't really been active in MediaWiki development or related things for over a year. —Aryeh Gregor (talk • contribs) 23:41, 17 November 2011 (UTC)

Nomination for deletion of Template:Numbers (130s)

Template:Numbers (130s) has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Bulwersator (talk) 05:54, 8 December 2011 (UTC)

Nomination for deletion of Template:Identity

Template:Identity has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Alakzi (talk) 10:13, 31 August 2015 (UTC)

ArbCom elections are now open!

Hi,
You appear to be eligible to vote in the current Arbitration Committee election. The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Misplaced Pages arbitration process. It has the authority to enact binding solutions for disputes between editors, primarily related to serious behavioural issues that the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the ability to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail. If you wish to participate, you are welcome to review the candidates' statements and submit your choices on the voting page. For the Election committee, MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 12:56, 23 November 2015 (UTC)

Nomination for deletion of Template:Solicit then inform

Template:Solicit then inform has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Ten Pound Hammer03:57, 5 June 2017 (UTC)

ArbCom 2018 election voter message

Hello, Simetrical. Voting in the 2018 Arbitration Committee elections is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 3 December. All users who registered an account before Sunday, 28 October 2018, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Thursday, 1 November 2018 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.

The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Misplaced Pages arbitration process. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.

If you wish to participate in the 2018 election, please review the candidates and submit your choices on the voting page. MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 18:42, 19 November 2018 (UTC)

Nomination of LogFS for deletion

A discussion is taking place as to whether the article LogFS is suitable for inclusion in Misplaced Pages according to Misplaced Pages's policies and guidelines or whether it should be deleted.

The article will be discussed at Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/LogFS until a consensus is reached, and anyone, including you, is welcome to contribute to the discussion. The nomination will explain the policies and guidelines which are of concern. The discussion focuses on high-quality evidence and our policies and guidelines.

Users may edit the article during the discussion, including to improve the article to address concerns raised in the discussion. However, do not remove the article-for-deletion notice from the top of the article until the discussion has finished.

ZimZalaBim 13:44, 12 May 2024 (UTC)

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