Sunday, October 21, 2007

My Wikipedia "Good Deed" for the Day

Was browsing through some of the pics I had taken while visiting the Monterrey Bay Aquarium with the family back in April, I ran across a nice pic I had of a giant jellyfish, its long arms extending several meters from its large, bulbous bell. Whenever I take pics at museums (or aquariums) I make a point of also taking a pic of the accompanying plaque or board describing the thing I have taken a pic of. Turns out this beastie was the Black sea nettle, a rarish Pacific coast jellyfish, which has the Latin name "Chrysaora achlyos".

So I looked it up in Wikipedia, in order to see whether or not there was a pic of it already. But not only was there no pics, but there was no article—just a "red link" from the genus page for that species, indicating a link to a "hole" in the encyclopedia.

So I spent an hour researching the creature and managed to pull together, in about an hour, a fairly decent, substantive article on it. Jellyfish are definitely not my specialty, but I was able to find some good online resources that I referenced in the article, and managed to pull the formatting (and some generic jellyfish info) from the related Sea nettle article. Voilà!, instant semi-decent and substantive article.

I threw in a nomination to make it a "Did you know?" article, which is a summary of a major point from new articles recently posted to Wikipedia that appears on its main page.

And I uploaded the pic to Wikimedia Commons, which is what started the whole process in the first place.

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Friday, April 13, 2007

Another Wikipedia "Did You Know" Article is Featured

A few days after starting the last article that got picked up as a "Did You Know", I did a piece on Ankhhaf, a prince of the 4th dynasty. The inspiration came from the famous bust of him that I saw at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, several pictures of which I added to Wikimedia. He was a son of the Great Pyramid builder Khufu and likely oversaw the construction of the sphinx, depicting a likeness of his brother the pharaoh Khafre.

Did You Know #2

The article is mainly about the bust, which is a very striking object in person. When I was in the room where the early dynasty pieces from the Giza plateau, I had the distinct feeling that piece was changing expression. A closer look at it revealed the reason why: the mouth has been sculpted, either deliberately or not, so that the expression appears to be slightly different depending on one's orientation to it. A striking effect, and in the dim light of an enclosed mastaba who knows how this affect would have been enhanced by torchlight.

Anyways, I was able to pull together a short and relatively comprehensive article on the man and particularly his statuary bust, and someone noticed it and nominated it for another "Did You Know" piece. I only got word about it immediately prior to it being posted, otherwise I might have missed it.

It's a a nice "thank you" and to some degree an acknowledgment of the quality of the piece.

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Thursday, April 05, 2007

Another Article Makes it to the Main Page of Wikipedia

The other day I started writing a new article on Wikipedia about reserve heads, those enigmatic sculptures from the time of the Pyramid builders. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, had several of them on display, and I managed to take pictures of all that they had, which I then uploaded to Wikimedia Commons.

Turns out that the "Did You Know?" section on Wikipedia is aimed at new articles created within the past five days, and someone spotted my article in the list and nominated it for inclusion. I got a notice today that it had been accepted, and appears as the top-most article reference (along with a picture of one of the heads) in today's DYK section.

Wikipedia's DYK section featuring the Reserve heads article

Was rather chuffed to find in one of the articles I referenced from my personal library that very few published views exist of the heads other than face-on views -- I took at least a couple of shots of each head, (primarily in order to defeat glare from overhead lighting), and am happy if they end up proving useful to somebody.

It's not a Feature article, but it's still nice to get some sort of recognition.

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Friday, January 05, 2007

Another Feature Article on Wikipedia!

Today, a second feature article that I contributed to substantially has ended up on Wikipedia. Here it is:

Ahmose I

Late last year I ended up collaborating with another contributor to Wikipedia and largely between the two of us we managed to bring up a previously negligible article on this particular Ancient Egyptian pharaoh up to snuff

In my opinion it's too bad that the Wikipedia-powers-that-be opted to go with the mummy head as the "lead picture" for the article. There's a much better image of a shabti that has this king's likeness, but I gather that as it is ultimately derived from a scanned image in a book, they would instead prefer to use an image that is free and clear of any copyright, and the mummy image (which originally was taken in the late 1890s) fits the bill. Still, it is somewhat gruesome image to be greeted with when you load up Wikipedia.

Luckily I have built up a decent personal reference library on the general subject, so I was able to add to the article, as well as source some of the graphics that were used on the page (at least one from an out-of-copyright text that I was familiar with on the Project Gutenberg site). It's a hobby.

It is interesting how much Wikipedia has become one of those "essential" Web sites, on par with search engines like Google or news services like Slashdot. Despite the bad press that the site sometimes gets, and I just about everybody I work with uses it in their daily and professional lives extensively. Sure there are individual articles that you need to take with a large grain/box/dried-up seabed of salt, but so long as one is aware of this you can find a lot of genuinely useful information on a lot of topics in an easy-to-find place.

From my time as a reader and as a frequent contributor to the site, the types of articles that are vandalized the most (almost always by people who do not have accounts – signing an article addition using only an I.P. address is enough to warrant further scrutiny by any upstanding editor) tend to be biographical articles, television shows or places. The vandalism is usually pretty obvious, like the persons who replaced the entire content of this article earlier today with "batty", or "Dahh Timmy", or "he was silly". Everything on Wikipedia is under version control, so it is easy to revert such changes quickly. In addition to attentive human editors and admins there are anti-vandal bots that look for typical vandal phrases, so the more obvious cases don't usually stand for more than a minute, typically stamping an additional ban on the vandal editor to boot. On the whole the system is getting better and the information seems to be getting more and more reliable over time. And given the usual vector I see for vandalism I for one am an advocate that anyone who edits ought to go through the bother of registering first. (There are lots of good anonymous contributions, but they are far outweighed by the number of anonymous vandals).

Arguably articles like the Ahmose I collaborated on are good test cases as to why Wikipedia is useful and worthwhile. IMHO the article is arguably better and more complete than any single piece I have run across in any other reference work I have seen -- I very much doubt that any one expert (or two) would spend as much time and effort on this subject as did the group of people who ended up contributing to this article.

The other thing I like about Wikimedia is that it is the one project must in keeping with what the founder of the Web, Tim Berners-Lee originally had in mind that the Web ought to be a place where you can not only view Web pages, but amend them with new/better information. It was a vision that couldn't easily be done in the early 1990s, but Wikipedia shows that this idea can bear fruit. I have used it as a reference for work and for play, and where possible, I like contributing back some of my time and effort into something that is genuinely useful and is quickly becoming the source for summary info on just about any topic.

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