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People are strange: ‘Deleted Wikipedia articles submitted by insane people’
06.22.2017
09:12 am
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Now I wouldn’t go so far as saying the folks who submitted these titles to Wikipedia were technically “insane”—that’s just the title of the YouTube video—but they are, however, very questionable.

I can see why a lot of these were deleted from Wikipedia. I mean, “Kids Raping and Singing” or “How to Trick People Into Thinking You’re a Wizard”? These are just a few of the freakishly-funny topics and titles that (apparently) real people came up with. I don’t want to ruin the video for you, just watch it. The longer it goes on, the funnier it gets.

People are strange.

 
via reddit

Posted by Tara McGinley
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06.22.2017
09:12 am
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TL;DR Wikipedia: Condensed for your reading pleasure
04.15.2014
02:00 pm
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TL;DR Wikipedia is an excellent source of information for the “fuck it, I don’t have time to read this shit” generation. It cuts to the chase, getting rid of those annoying words Wikipedia entries are full of and summarizes everything you need to know about a topic / subject in just a sentence or two. Invaluable, I tell ya! You’ll learn something new—but not too much—every single day!


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Via Daily Dot

Posted by Tara McGinley
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04.15.2014
02:00 pm
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Physical Wikipedia
05.14.2010
08:40 pm
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Wikipedia
5000 pages, fully printed
Articles in the book are taken from Wikipedia’s featured articles.
 
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Wikipedia: Rob Matthews
 
thx Michael Perry Goodman!

Posted by Brad Laner
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05.14.2010
08:40 pm
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Appropedia: Wikipedia Makes Me Proud to Be Human
12.17.2009
07:53 pm
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Great essay from Curt Beckmann at the Appropedia Blog. (Appropedia is a wiki based on appropriate technology and sustainability. Great, important resource.)

It’s true.  For all our faults, we humans have done something amazing at Wikipedia.  Sure, the folks on staff there deserve a bit of credit, but it’s the millions contributors like you and me that built that phenomenal resource.  And fast.  And it ain’t exactly done yet.  I just took a look at the English Wikipedia statistics page again.  Eleven million registered users.  Not bad.  Three million articles.  A whopping 350M page edits.  If the average edit takes a minute (gee, that seems short to me) then that’s at least 6M hours of work!  All done free for the rest of us to make use of.  And of course that’s just in English; I figure we oughta multiply by ten for all the other languages (and yeah, that seems low also). Equally amazing to me is that even the organizing structures and policies were all built organically by volunteers.  The approach has been “let’s try to find policies that will work.”  And, one way or another, 11M registered users (plus a bunch of anonymous users and some bots) managed to figure out how to work together, for free, to build something functional and useful.

So, yes, I marvel at the remarkable edifice that is Wikipedia, and I think it says something about what humans are capable of.  And yet, I’ve only made a few small edits there.  Instead, Wikipedia’s success motivated me to create my own wiki around how we humans can work together in practical ways to make lives better.  ( “WinWinWiki” got as big as 14 pages before I joined Chris and Lonny here at Appropedia, which had more pages,  maybe even 100.)   Appropedia’s hard problem is that much of the information we value often resides nonverbally in people’s heads and not on some web page.  Find the words to describe how to select the best local dirt for your earthen blocks takes some cleverness.  Consider something as “simple” as rainwater harvesting.  Wikipedia has a nice overview page on the topic, but they don’t provide enough information to build your own system.  Appropedia has a portal focused on rainwater harvesting, with lots of links to practical articles on actually doing some rainwater harvesting.  No doubt there are still unanswered questions, or regional variations that could be added.  Some of that info is hiding on the web somewhere, but some might be in your head.  Or in someone’s head who (gasp!) doesn’t spend much time on the internet, or perhaps doesn’‘t have regular access (at least for a couple of years).

(Appropedia: Wikipedia Makes Me Proud to Be Human)

Posted by Jason Louv
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12.17.2009
07:53 pm
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