User:Ajgorhoe/Notes/Deleted

=Other deleted articles (not mine)=

Deleted article: International Project Management Association
I was looking for articles on International Project Management Association (IPMA) and realized that an article on IPMA had existed but has been deleted several times. This is a notable subject on international organization having a key role in setting standards and providing certification for project management.

Since the topic is important, I would like to create the article. Before doing that, I would like to have some additional information, and I ask the involved editors and administrators to provide the information. In particular, I am interested in answers to these questions:
 * Is it possible to restore the article contents somewhere (maybe on my user pages) and possibly (preferably) make also its edit history available?
 * When article was first (speedily) deleted, wasn't it possible to just revert additions of disputable (promotion) content and leave some basis for improvement? By deletion, possibly useful edits were lost, too (if they existed, which I can not currently verify).
 * Is it possible to restore the part that is not disputable (if there is any)? In this case, I would ask administrators involved in deletion to do that, as a better alternative to starting the article completely from scratch.

See: Involved users to be informed of this discussion:
 * revision history
 * International_Project_Management_Association - nonexistent (deleted) page
 * Articles_for_deletion/International_Project_Management_Association - deletion discussion
 * related sockpuppet investigation: Sockpuppet_investigations/Cnbredillet/Archive
 * User_talk:Steel - speedily deleted for the first time - allegedly due to advertisement
 * User_talk:Randykitty - Closed deletion discussion for the first time, with deletion of the article
 * User_talk:Espresso_Addict - Speedily deleted as per Criteria_for_speedy_deletion - Recreation of a page that was deleted per a deletion discussion
 * User_talk:Ad_Orientem
 * User_talk:Vanjagenije - participated in related sockpuppet investigation: Sockpuppet_investigations/Cnbredillet/Archive
 * Participated (constructively) in deletion discussion:
 * User_talk:Mcmatter - said to revert article to cleaner version (so it was possible to preserve some material?)
 * User_talk:DGG - argued that notability was not demonstrated after cleaning

Notice to be left on users' page
==Deleted article: International Project Management Association==

Hi, I have some questions and request for help regarding the deleted article International Project Management Association. I would like to create the article or have it restored. Since the request concerns several editors and administrators, I have put it on my talk page:

* User_talk:Ajgorhoe

I kindly ask you to review the request there and answer it in full or in part, if you find it appropriate.

~

Deleted article: International Project Management Association
Hi, I have some questions and request for help regarding the deleted article International Project Management Association. I would like to create the article or have it restored. Since the request concerns several editors and administrators, I have put it on my talk page:


 * User_talk:Ajgorhoe

I kindly ask you to review the request there and answer it in full or in part, if you find it appropriate.

Ajgorhoe (talk) 18:06, 12 July 2017 (UTC)

= My deleted articles =
 * Eva Hren  Articles for deletion/Eva Hren
 * Numerical simulation - Notice about speedy deletion, Second notice; Article was eventually redirected to Computer Simulation, which is not OK (lattervis partially a super set of former, but not entirely)
 * Doodle event scheduling - Notice about deletion procedure; Article was eventually deleted but restored later, now it redirects to Doodle.com. The part of the history of initial article is missing.

= Discussed for Deletion =

= My deleted articles - Copies =

This Section contains articles that I have started but were deleted, and I think these articles shoulld be included on Wikipedia (or at least their contents should be merged into other Wikipedia articles).

= Uno (software) = Uno (software) Talk:Uno (software)

Articles_for_deletion/Uno_(software) - discussion about proposed deletion

Some more references:

The State of .NET GUI Frameworks WebAssembly and .NET PUSHING THE RIGHT BUTTONS : HOW UNO IMPLEMENTS VIEWS — UNDER THE HOOD Under the Hood: an Introduction to Uno Platform [https://dzone.com/articles/why-xaml-why-now-1 Why XAML? Why Now?] [https://www.telerik.com/blogs/why-xaml-why-now Why XAML? Why Now?] [ ] C# and WebAssembly Intro to Uno Platform Building a TipCalc using Platform Uno

Articles on Uno at Medium

Already cited in article:

Cross Platform Mobile Apps with .NET and Uno The Story About .NET Cross Platform UI Frameworks

My comment on talk page when marked for deletion:

Uno (software) - version of March 13, 2019
((Embedded in nowiki tags))

Uno Platform is an open source cross-platform graphical user interface for building that allow Universal Windows Platform - based code to run on iOS, Android, and WebAssembly. Platform is released under the Apache 2.0 license.

Applications can be built by using the UWP tools in Visual Studio on Windows, including XAML and C# Edit and Continue, and run on iOS, Android or in WebAssembly in a web browser. An Edit and Continue web demonstration is also available on the software web page. Among other example that demonstrate use of the platform, there is an example running a SQLite database store in a web browser in Web Assembly.

AForge.NET - version of 13 March 2019
((Embedded in nowiki tags))

AForge.NET is a computer vision and artificial intelligence library originally developed by Andrew Kirillov for the .NET Framework.

The source code and binaries of the project are available under the terms of the Lesser GPL and the GPL (GNU General Public License).

Another (unaffiliated) project called Accord.NET was created to extend the features of the original AForge.NET library.

Discontinuation of free public support and future development
On April 1, 2012, Andrew Kirillov announced the end of the public support for the library, temporarily closing the discussion forums. The last release of the AForge.NET Framework was made available on July 17, 2013. However, since its release 3.0 in 2015, the Accord.NET project started to incorporate most of the original AForge.NET source code in its codebase, continuing its support and development under the Accord.NET name.

Features
The framework's API includes support for:
 * Computer vision, image processing and video processing
 * Including a comprehensive image filter library
 * Artificial Neural networks library implements some common network architectures (multi-layer feed forward and distance networks) and learning algorithms (back propagation, delta rule, simple perceptron, evolutionary learning).
 * Genetic algorithms, genetic programming and gene expression programming
 * Fuzzy logic
 * Machine learning
 * and libraries for a select set of robotics kits
 * Lego Mindstorms NXT and RCX kits

The framework is provided not only with different libraries and their sources, but with many sample applications, which demonstrate the use of this framework, and with documentation help files, which are provided in HTML Help format. A number of software applications   and research works   utilized the framework.

Vote against deletion of this article
I vote against deletion. Accord.NET is a notable .NET framework library for machine learning, artificial intelligence, computer vision, statistics, and others. Numerous software uses the library. It has intensively been used in research. See e.g. this list of references: I've worked on the article some time ago in good faith, being aware of the subject's notability. I hoped that fellow wikipedians will take up improving the article, but it has not evolved quickly. I'm afraid this is just another indicator of declining potential of our community. Why not taking a breath instead of obstructing already modest efforts for creation of this reference knowledge base? Please help expand and improve the article, not delete it.
 * A list of some references about Aforge.NET

Accord.NET - version of 13 March 2019
Accord.NET is a framework for scientific computing in .NET. The source code of the project is available under the terms of the Gnu Lesser Public License, version 2.1.

The framework comprises a set of libraries that are available in source code as well as via executable installers and NuGet packages. The main areas covered include numerical linear algebra, numerical optimization, statistics, machine learning, artificial neural networks, signal and image processing, and support libraries (such as graph plotting and visualization). The project was originally created to extend the capabilities of the AForge.NET Framework, but has since incorporated AForge.NET inside itself. Newer releases have united both frameworks under the Accord.NET name.

The Accord.NET Framework has been featured in multiple books such as Mastering.NET Machine Learning by PACKT publishing and F# for Machine Learning Applications, featured in QCON San Francisco, and currently accumulates more than 1,500 forks in GitHub.

Multiple scientific publications have been published with the use of the framework.

Accord.NET - older version
Accord.NET is a framework for scientific computing in .NET. The source code of the project is available under the terms of the Gnu Lesser Public License, version 2.1.

The framework comprises a set of libraries that are available in source code as well as via executable installers and NuGet packages. The main areas covered include numerical linear algebra, numerical optimization, statistics, machine learning, artificial neural networks, signal and image processing, and support libraries (such as graph plotting and visualization). The project was originally created to extend the capabilities of the AForge.NET Framework, but has since incorporated AForge.NET inside itself. Newer releases have united both frameworks under the Accord.NET name.

My vote against deletion of this article
I vote against deletion. Amebis is a company notable for development of language technologies and some of its products are important sources for studying contemporary Slovenian language. I've started the article quite some time ago and a number of other contributors have improved it. Why not further improving this article instead of deleting it? --Ajgorhoe (talk) 00:29, 21 June 2017 (UTC)

Amebis from Kamnik is the main company in Slovenia in the field of language technologies. bIts current manager is Miro Romih. The company has published a number of machine-readable dictionaries and encyclopedic dictionaries (e.g. ASP(32) dictionaries), and developed spell checkers, grammar checkers, hyphenators and lemmatizers for Slovene, Serbian and Albanian languages. In co-operation with the Jožef Stefan Institute they have developed a speech synthesiser and screen reader Govorec (Speaker). They have also provided technical support for the largest text corpus of Slovene language, called FidaPLUS.

Current state

 * User:Ajgorhoe/ZedGraph- contents restored to my user space by deleting author.

Material

 * - Mono - list of libraries, with NPlot and ZedGraph


 * - review of charting libraries


 * - univ. paper


 * project summary


 * - in a paper.

Current state

 * User:Ajgorhoe/NPlot- contents will be restored to my user space by deleting author.

Material
Reviews:
 * - NPlot review


 * - Mono - list of libraries, with NPlot and ZedGraph

= Xwt = Xwt Talk:Xwt

My vote against deletion of this article
I vote against deletion. Xwt is an important GUI toolkit for Mono, an alternative open source alternative to Microsoft's .NET implementation. It is notable for it's rendering approach. I've started the article quite some time ago, hoping that the article will evolve with time. Help is needed to improve the article, especially from people with more expert knowledge o the subject. Improve, not delete. --Ajgorhoe (talk) 00:44, 21 June 2017 (UTC)

Xwt is a .NET cross-platform user interface toolkit. It enables building GUI-based desktop applications that run on multiple platforms without having to customizing code for different platforms. Xwt API is mapped to a set of native controls on each supported platform. Features that are not available on specific platforms are emulated by using native widgets, which is referred to as hosting in the Xwt context. Xwt was partially used as GUI toolkit (beside GTK#) in the development of the Xamarin Studio.

Xwt creates an engine at runtime that will map API calls to the underlying platform. The following engines are currently supported:
 * Windows: WPF engine and Gtk engine (using Gtk#)
 * Mac OS X: Cocoa engine (using MonoMac) and Gtk engine (using Gtk#)
 * Linux: Gtk engine (using Gtk#)