User talk:Pi zero

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Response regarding Burnham merge proposals
From Canadian2006 (talk) 02:43, 31 January 2008 (UTC)   The merge proposals are not something I feel strongly about, so I deleted the merge proposals. My reasoning for suggesting the merger was based on the overlap among the three articles. Much of the material in the Daniel Burnham article is about the work of his firm. In a situation like this where one man dominates an architectural firm, it's hard to separate the work of the man from the work of his firm. Also, I noticed that for some of the other famous architects, biographical material and material about their firms were blended together in a single article.

Nonetheless, this is not something I feel so strongly about that I want to tread on others' toes. Perhaps adding some internal links under a "See also" section would achieve the same end result as merging.

The Tales of Beedle the Bard
Hi, I would like to ask you a favor. I don't have the English version of HP7, and I need someone who does. Can you look n the book at chapter 7 (The Will of Albus Dumbledore), and tell me which is the page where The Tales of Beedle the Bard is first mentioned (it's where that magician reads from Dumbledore's will about the book he has to give to Hermione). diego_pmc (talk) 07:26, 21 May 2008 (UTC)


 * Done, such as I can &mdash; the Deathly Hallows page says the US edition is about a hundred fifty pages longer than the UK edition. Pi zero (talk) 00:53, 22 May 2008 (UTC)

Please see the discussion page diego_pmc (talk) 15:07, 12 June 2008 (UTC)

Explanations
Hi Pi zero,

I take your point on providing explanations for edits reverted and will keep it in mind in future.

The sentence you deleted has problems of tone and clarity. It remains necessary to the section, though, as it underpins the mentions of the "second major concept" and "third concept" later on. I may edit it for style one of these days if no one else does first.

The reason for replacing & ndash; with a simple typed hyphen is that the hyphen makes for a text that is easier to read when editing.

You caught several things that needed to be changed, and these contributions are most welcome as far as I am concerned.

Regards, VikSol (talk) 20:12, 14 July 2008 (UTC)

"Interview with" or "interview by"?
How is it correct "Interview with George Bush by Mr. Reporter", or "Interview [...] with Mr. Reporter"? Also do you say GWB stated in and interview BY or WITH Mr. Reporter? I've seen it both ways in quite a few places and I'm a little confused. diego_pmc (talk) 14:29, 13 August 2008 (UTC)


 * In a generic context, I'd go with "Interview with George Bush by Mr. Reporter". There are contexts where the prepositions would be used differently, though.  I think what happens is this (but this is a rationalization, since if it led me to a usage that sounded wrong, I'd go with my instincts):  The preposition "by" indicates the party that I am viewing as the initiator of the activity, while the "with" indicates the other participant.  The usual (hence, generic) case of discussing interviews is that I'm a news consumer, who thinks of interviews from the perspective of the media; that's the impression that the media try to foster, after all, that the interviewer is asking questions that we the news consumers would ask if we could.  In that case, when I reach into my stack of press clippings and pull one out and hand it to you, I might say, "This is an interview with George Bush by The New York Times".  But if for some reason I identify with the interviewee &mdash; if, say, I'm a member of the Bush administration talking about what we've said to the press and when we've said it &mdash; I might say "That was an interview by Cheney", or "That was an interview with The New York Times".
 * I would say "GWB stated in an interview with Mr. Reporter" regardless of which perspective I was taking. Maybe that's because GWB is then unquestionably the initiator.  Pi zero (talk) 20:30, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

Concerned comic article
Hi, I'm currently trying to improve Concerned (see my progress here - 2 days' work), and I need some help, and don't know where to turn. As you might have noticed from the talk page of Beedle the Bard, I'm not that good at making summaries. Do you think you can help me by shortening the summary found on the comic's article page? If you didn't play Half-Life 2, or read the comic, I don't really think it is much of a problem, and I'm able to correct any inaccuracies that might appear. If you decide to help, please start from shortening from the third paragraph of the Plot section, to the end of the section (the first two paragraphs are already included in "Plot summary" on my intermediary page). Please help me with this if you can. Thanks! diego_pmc (talk) 21:46, 17 August 2008 (UTC)


 * I'll try to scrape up time to give this a try in the next day or two. Whether I can produce something at all helpful to you, I can't promise, but I suppose that's part of the point of using a forked copy of the article.  I see the guidelines for comics plot summaries are here.  Pi zero (talk) 10:08, 18 August 2008 (UTC)

Thanks. I tried to reduce its size a bit, you can check it out at section Plot summary. It is somewhat more reasonable now, but it could be better. diego_pmc (talk) 11:17, 18 August 2008 (UTC)


 * There seem to be only a few more targets of opportunity for surgical trimming &mdash; things that are neither allusions to anything much (though I'm guessing on those), nor used later. The business in the second-to-last paragraph about rebel clothing and crossbow seems spurious, but I wasn't sure how to straighten out the narrative line of that paragraph since I haven't read the comic.
 * If we want to cut it down to noticeably shorter than it already is, we're going to have to start removing allusions. Down that road, I wondered about the Antlions; I suspect they might come out rather cleanly, and if something's got to go they seem like a relatively lesser allusion.
 * It's possible that cutting things out isn't the right strategy at all, though. Perhaps some kind of rewrite...  Pi zero (talk) 19:47, 18 August 2008 (UTC)

Well done!
I also want to thank you for this, and want to ask for your opinion. Do you think there is any point in listing Concerned for FAC now? Diego_pmc Talk 17:40, 9 September 2008 (UTC)


 * You want advice from someone with much more knowledge of that process than I have. (I was only a bit player on the huge Vampire upgrade last year.)  Leafing through the Wikiproject Comics pages, it looks as if you could get the right sort of advice by requesting a peer review, giving as you reason that you'd like to know what could be done to improve the article further, with an eye toward eventual FAC.  Pi zero (talk) 23:39, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

Seems it's not necessary, and besides that advice given at the proj page is sometimes semiautomated, which won't do me any good. Diego_pmc Talk 17:36, 10 September 2008 (UTC)

Anne Rice
Hi there Pi Zero! I would value your input on the place of Anne Rice in Vampire literature at Vampire literature. Colin4C (talk) 22:04, 16 November 2008 (UTC)

Voynich Manuscript: The hint is/are two symbols
Hi Pi,

In the Voynich Manuscript, you lately changed the sentence "Another hint are two symbols..." to "Another hint is two symbols...". Wouldn't both be correct, since the hint consists of two symbols, but at the same time both symbols make up the hint? (Since it's an equivalent, it goes both ways, methinks. Not meaning to criticize your edit -- I'm just curious, since I'm not a native speaker.) --Syzygy (talk) 12:22, 12 December 2008 (UTC)


 * The verb agrees with the subject, not the object, even though they're being equated. Thus, They are the same person, and He is two different people.  Pi zero (talk) 19:21, 12 December 2008 (UTC)


 * That makes sense... Thanx! --Syzygy (talk) 11:14, 15 December 2008 (UTC)

ndash
Many thanks Pi, I wil fix that immeediately. Rich  Farmbrough 15:10 28  December 2009 (UTC).

AfD nomination of Magic in Harry Potter
An editor has nominated one or more articles which you have created or worked on, for deletion. The nominated article is Magic in Harry Potter. We appreciate your contributions, but the nominator doesn't believe that the article satisfies Wikipedia's criteria for inclusion and has explained why in his/her nomination (see also Notability and "What Wikipedia is not").

Your opinions on whether the article meets inclusion criteria and what should be done with the article are welcome; please participate in the discussion(s) by adding your comments to Articles for deletion/Magic in Harry Potter. Please be sure to sign your comments with four tildes ( ~ ).

You may also edit the article during the discussion to improve it but should not remove the articles for deletion template from the top of the article; such removal will not end the deletion debate.

Please note: This is an automatic notification by a bot. I have nothing to do with this article or the deletion nomination, and can't do anything about it. --Erwin85Bot (talk) 01:09, 27 February 2010 (UTC)

Reasons for revert?
Hello, Π0, I wonder what your reasons were for this revert? At the top of the page it says the following: ''“… Its purpose is to record decisions made in discussions at Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style. … This document is meant as a reference of consensus decisions on the Wikipedia Manual of Style and, when available, the reasoning behind each consensus. … This register is meant only to give editors better understanding of the current state of things, which is useful both to those considering proposing changes and to those seeking to better implement the MoS as it exists.”'' The topic of typographical vs. programming quotation marks has never had a consensus. Thus the page have to document this fact. By blanking that section you make it appear as if there was some kind of consensus only nobody had the time to document it. While in truth there wasn’t a consensus through many years of MoS existence. And it is ok for that section to be biased towards the typographical quotation marks, since the MoS itself is presently biased towards the programming glyphs.  // st pasha  » 19:46, 13 May 2010 (UTC)


 * Hello, Stpasha.


 * The MOSR is, to my understanding of both its intent and its useful function, akin to an article in the sense that its mission is objective presentation of fact (like an article), not presentation of consensus (like a policy or guideline) or persuasion to an opinion (like an essay or talk page). By that understanding, it's not an appropriate place to argue your case pro curly quotes, which to be honest is what your original entry did.  An example of something that would be useful, and could be exquisitely neutral, would be a list of links to past discussions on the topic, similar to what is now provided at WP:MOSR.


 * It is direly difficult to write more than a list of links in a MOSR entry without being POV. Every additional word or phrase is fraught with hazard.  Some entries seem to me to show evidence that past contributors have tried very hard to at least briefly explain the different sides of an issue with NPOV, but they've achieved only mixed results.  Part of the difficulty is, of course, that writing nontrivial commentary on all sides of an issue without bias requires enormous effort and time and has the potential to be even more contentious than deciding what the MOS itself should say &mdash; and it's just not worth it, not when less effort (collection of archival links, which should be there in any case) will usually produce a more useful resource.  The winning strategy is to give people the evidence that they can study and refer to, and let them forge their own interpretation; if they agree with your interpretation, you've got an ally, and if they disagree with your interpretation, then you're better off with someone who disagrees and is having no problem assuming you're reasonable, rather than with someone who both disagrees and suspects your side of unreason.  Of course they'd still fight against the urge to perceive your side as unreasonable, if they've got Wikipedia nature, but things will run more smoothly if they don't have to fight for that perception.


 * I appreciate your efforts, after reverting my revert, in adding links into the archives, which provide a gateway to a substantial amount of (I'm inclined to believe) unbiased information; but unfortunately your presentation surrounding the links is still heavily biased. Beyond the obvious biases in the position descriptions, your interpretations of past events don't appear to me to be well supported by the archival links provided.


 * I don't agree, BTW, that an empty MOSR section implies a consensus (though it scarcely matters now, as with some substantive content an empty section is no longer a reasonable choice); my understanding of an empty MOSR section is that it means, exactly, that the MOSR does not yet provide any information on that topic. From the state of the MOS, a naive reader is likely to infer the existence of a consensus for what the MOS says, and a reader with more MOS experience is likely to infer the likely past existence of a consensus for what it says, and a current lack of consensus for changing it.  Making the MOS a sort of decaying average of past consensuses (well, sort of).


 * No, it absolutely is not okay for the MOSR to be biased. This has nothing to do with whether the MOS is biased toward straight quotes (and it's actually not necessary to parse here just what that means).  Assuming that it were biased, your position seems to be that two wrongs make a right, which they absolutely don't; in my experience, two wrongs make a miserable situation that leads to a worse future than a smaller number of wrongs would have.  --Pi zero (talk) 04:51, 14 May 2010 (UTC)


 * I agree that my presentation of the facts is biased. But I tried, really. I searched through the archives trying to find any real argument in favor of straight quotes, and I couldn’t. They are all either come down to laziness (that is, people simply don’t want to use to curlies because they are hard to type), or are entirely made up (for example, someone made an article “hole saw” (quotes are part of the name) as a redirect to drill bit instead of the hole saw, in order to “demonstrate” that curly quotes fail in the search function), or maintain that curly quotes would present compatibility issues (regardless of the fact that Wikipedia uses Unicode characters in most of the articles now). Thus I infer that I became unable of producing the unbiased summary of the opinions, my sight is just “too clouded”. So I did what I could, and I guess someone will have to fix it now, but at least it’s better than the absence of any information on the topic.  // st pasha  » 05:40, 14 May 2010 (UTC)

Check in IE-browser
Hi, a request, because of your earlier interest. Here User:Aeusoes1 described a problem with Template:IPA consonant chart in his IE browser (then he retired for some days). I found a possible solution, but I cannot check behavior in IE (Firefox and Safari did OK). So if you can use IE, could you check the effect of the sandboxes experiment, linked in that talk? Expected & unexpected behavior is described in the talk. -DePiep (talk) 12:53, 3 August 2010 (UTC) linkfix -DePiep (talk) 12:55, 3 August 2010 (UTC)

Wikinews style guide
Hi, I see you made an edit there. The style guide desperately needs a thorough copy-edit, and I've started by examining the first few paragraphs, on the talk page. I have no particular agenda in changing the substantive guides—at least not in the near future. Just in cutting back the verbiage so it's easier to read. You may be interested in this endeavour; the style guide probably needs assistance from more editors in the long term. Tony  (talk)  16:14, 22 September 2010 (UTC)


 * Are you, by any chance, thinking of me as a sometime contributor to MOS talk? I am that, of course.  To be certain we're on the same page though:  I'm also a Wikinews reviewer and admin, and lately I spend more time on Wikinews than any other WMF project.


 * I've effectively spent the past two years studying the deep-down differences between WP, WB, and WN. From that perspective, a few thoughts on why, it seems to me, you're getting such a mixed reception at Wikinews:


 * The trouble isn't (exactly) xenophobia, nor lack of "social points". Wikinewsies can be very friendly to newcomers, from Wikipedia or anywhere else, who are trying to learn how to contribute to Wikinews.  However, it does take hands-on experience writing news at Wikinews to have a real grasp of the how and why of the place, and that grasp is needed when tinkering with site policy &mdash; so voice on policy matters is (sort of) earned through on-site news work, i.e., mainspace edits.  There's a stereotype (alas, with uncomfortably much truth in it) of the Wikipedian who doesn't try to understand what's different about Wikinews, but instead assumes that Wikipedia is what all other wikis just haven't realized they should be, and sets about trying to import Wikipedian practices that mismatch the task-driven demands of Wikinews.


 * Unfortunately, you're setting yourself up to fit the profile of the stereotype, which is not likely to win friends and influence people. You come from Wikipedia with no Wikinews mainspace edits, talking about improving the Style Guide and what's wrong with the project that has to change.  For perspective, in my two years there I've scarcely touched the Style Guide.  --Pi zero (talk) 05:41, 23 September 2010 (UTC)
 * I see you've removed my reply to this post, which needed to be rebutted. Too uncomfortable for you? Tony   (talk)  03:11, 28 September 2010 (UTC)


 * In fact, there were points in your post that I wanted to respond to (although composing a calm and rational response was clearly going to take a lot of time devoted to combing out those things that needed to be allowed to slide away). The complete post was not permitted content for Wikipedia user space, a difficulty not entirely unrelated to the presence of elements that would have had to be let slide.  However, I did try to suggest in the edit summary how some of the material could be recast in a form that, I believe, would conform to the Wikipedia guidelines.  I didn't go any further than that edit summary at the time, because to be honest I was uncertain whether you were interested in a dialog.


 * If in fact you are interested in a dialog, here is a possible way forward that might be especially likely to avoid permissibility problems. I would undertake to recast some of your points in (hopefully) permissible form, and make some remarks of my own, striving of course to be very clear on what was whose.  We could then proceed from there, possibly including discussion of whether my recasting of your points was successful and whether there were other points not yet recast that could (and should) be.


 * Let me know if you would like me to attempt this. --Pi zero (talk) 13:13, 28 September 2010 (UTC)
 * I can see this will get nowhere. I am profoundly disappointed in your support for that culture; if you can't see it already, nothing I will say will get through to you. Perhaps you might take a look at a few of gobsmacking diffs I provided in my post at AAA before another apologist protected the person we're referring to by freezing the page. It's a most serious matter, but you seem to be unwilling to engage with it.
 * I thought much more of you on the basis of your en.WP style-guide contributions. I should add that a lot of other users have been watching those proceedings, so god knows what they think—I suspect there's a tendency to be judgmental, and who could blame them? If you have anything to say that might change my view, I'm happy to listen. You are perfectly welcome to email if you find bureaucratic impediments to speaking plainly here, . Tony   (talk)  13:37, 28 September 2010 (UTC)
 * PS And I'm sorry to be a little hard and unrelenting. I guess I'm pissed with you. It will pass and things will return as they were here. But the failed WN model will remain unquestioned, bumbling on, when it needs a proper review for the sake of the WMF. Tony   (talk)  14:23, 28 September 2010 (UTC)

Perhaps we can get somewhere, by approaching the tangle of issues from its edges: take one specific, relatively simple point, discuss it, then move on to another, and clear out the peripheral stuff so there's common ground we can stand on when we get to the center. (Sorry, I'm afraid that metaphor got mixed somehow.) Here's one specific point, to start with.

In your cquote from a "WP friend" (in the content that you link to, above), it is asserted that
 * They have no primary news-gathering capability; the entire effort is founded on re-writing ... news articles that appear in subscribing publications ....

That's incorrect. I don't know the context that originally surrounded the passage that you cquoted, of course, so I can only speak to the cquoted material. The two main types of articles at Wikinews (as the content guide puts it; as a first approximation I suppose it'll do) are synthesis articles and original reporting. The cquote then levels some criticisms against synthesis articles, to which I can think of some responses (if you wish, though I've seen longer-established Wikinewsies wax more articulate on that than I'm likely to), but original reporting is highly prized, and close to the core of the the project's ideals. At the upper end of OR work is the user status of accreditation. Synthesis articles, besides whatever merits they have in themselves, are also what Wikinewsies cut their journalistic teeth on, both learning the skills of Wikinews mainspace writing (which sometimes even includes things like what it means to write news neutrally) and accumulating evidence of their journalistic reliability/trustworthiness. --Pi zero (talk) 19:27, 28 September 2010 (UTC)
 * Little or no primary news-gathering capacity. Almost the entire effort is on rehashing. So you're saying that the class (of synthesis articles) that comprises almost the entire output has a major raison d'etre to enable editors to "cut their teeth"? I'm more concerned about the product, the readership. The model and the mix needs to be re-examined.
 * But you have steered away from what I feel is more important: the dysfunctional power structure, and the fact that you have let examples of its worst excesses slide by without censure. As an arb, it is your job, along with Craig Spurrier, the steward, to uphold the behavioural and policy norms of the site. The steward has, in a very measured and diplomatic way, called it straight. I'm unsure such diplomatic language will get through, though. You have done nothing; in fact, your "translation" did the opposite. Why are you not acting or saying anything? Tony   (talk)  04:28, 29 September 2010 (UTC)


 * I'd wanted to reply to the above within a couple of days. Although I'll return to it, I'm going to have to set it aside for a while, as it's been taking most of my wiki time and there are other things that need to be attended.


 * There's a lot I've wanted to say that I've been holding back, hitherto, because I couldn't see how to take things in an order that would be conducive to successful communication. A way to put that, I suppose, is that I literally didn't know where to start.  Since I failed in my attempt, above, to take things one at a time &mdash;inevitably perhaps, given that everything in this is connected to everything else&mdash; the alternative is to address "everything" at once.  Which takes a lot of time.  At any rate, I apologize for the delay, and wanted to reassure you that my silence here did not betoken abandonment.  --Pi zero (talk) 10:32, 2 October 2010 (UTC)

I still have trouble accepting that some people start with opinions and then choose "facts" to fit. It should have been obvious to me, from the rant claimed above to need rebutting, that no meaningful dialog could take place; perhaps the single most revealing passage in it was "Hard to disagree with that" &mdash; following a cquote unhinged from reality. Someone said you can't reason someone out of an opinion if they didn't get into it with reason (must look that up on Wikiquote). The alternative is to debate for an audience, which is politics and doesn't come naturally to me.

What really concerns me, though, is that somehow the cultural dynamics of Wikipedia fosters that kind of mindset. Indeed, there are these deep undercurrents that suggest a fundamental flaw in the marvelously idealistic experiment that is Wikipedia, undercurrents that have gradually built over time, unseen below the surface, that seem quite likely ultimately to destroy the project. It's not just Wikipedia, of course; at least some of this seems to be a major trend in modern culture (truthiness?), and Wikinews directly opposes it: research the facts before asserting them, keep in mind the sources of claims of fact, keep straight what is claimed fact and what is opinion. It's terrible to contemplate that crowdsourcing might be inherently corrosive to the ability of individuals to think objectively. --Pi zero (talk) 17:55, 9 November 2011 (UTC)

A kitten for you!


Amy 14:01, 29 July 2011 (UTC) 

A kitten for you!
Thanks for your review of my Wikinews article. Much appreciated.

Hawkeye7 (talk) 00:19, 13 June 2013 (UTC) 

Review Drive
 Hello Pi zero:

WikiProject Articles for creation is holding a  month long Backlog Elimination Drive!

The goal of this drive is to eliminate the backlog of unreviewed articles. The drive is running from June 1, 2014 to June 30, 2014.

Awards will be given out for all reviewers participating in the drive in the form of barnstars at the end of the drive.

There is a backlog of over articles, so start reviewing articles! Visit the drive's page and help out!

The AfC helper script can assist you in tallying your edits automatically. To view a full list of changes, visit the changelog. Please report bugs and feature requests there, too! Thanks. Vishal Bakhai - Works 09:00, 31 May 2014 (UTC)

You seem sensible!
I noticed your comment on Wikimedia argument board, about toxicity. I decided that I was too emotionally involved already in the prior section, and should return home, here to en wp before further embarrassing myself, bickering with Mr. Elvey in section 3f ;o)  I am Ellie Kesselman Feral Oink.

If anyone ever decides to pay any attention to your suggestions, and you need help, please consider asking me! I would be happy to assist.--FeralOink (talk) 17:29, 8 June 2014 (UTC)


 * Well, thanks. I'll keep you in mind.


 * I've been developing these ideas for years (by meditating deeply on the differences between Wikipedia, Wikibooks, and Wikinews), but now that I've finally got some working theories about why things are going awry, I don't know what to do with them. It has occurred to me, though, that I might as well be willing to share my ideas when an opportunity arises to do so reasonably peacefully; after all, the ideas surely won't do any good if nobody else hears them.  --Pi zero (talk) 19:44, 8 June 2014 (UTC)

Your comments at WT:RFA
I found your comments to be quite interesting.

In discussions similar to this one, the topic tends to wander very rapidly, and descend into the weeds rather than having any sense of focus on the overarching meaning. This has already begun to happen in the sub-thread I started there. I thus find it rare to require further comment on my part in the thread. If my posts cause some to think more abstractly of the problems facing the project, then some positive has been done.

You very clearly had some interesting thoughts regarding the abstract problems facing the project. It was encouraging to read your comments. I am curious what Douglas Hofstadter would think of Wikipedia from the perpsective of GEB, most especially what meaning can be derived from it all. --Hammersoft (talk) 19:51, 20 February 2015 (UTC)

P.S. What is the source of your pseudonym? Of note; at least in American format, Pi day, month, hour and second are soon approaching....3/14/15 9:26 a.m.


 * I've found it pleasant to go by a pseudonym. Alas, I can't explain the derivation of the pseudonym without exposing my real-world identity.  I will say, although physicists tend to suspect it has to do with pions, that's not it. :-)


 * I'm gratified you found my thoughts interesting. For years I tried to concentrate solely on the problems of Wikinews, figuring the problems of one smaller project were more than enough to consume one person without taking on the problems of a vast project like Wikipedia.  But along the way I've come to the conclusion Wikipedia and Wikinews, and all the other sisters, are very much alike even in their differences; and as for one person being too small to make a difference on a big project, I've realized it's ideas that can make a difference; and they spread when shared.  So now, when I read a discussion and find I have ideas appropriate to it, I share them.  --Pi zero (talk) 20:57, 20 February 2015 (UTC)

The Phantom
I did sincerely want to thank you for you newest comment. It's good to see that while editors can see an issue differently, they can be civil. Not everyone in this discussion is, and your mature responses are a breath of fresh air and much appreciated. With thanks, Tenebrae (talk) 20:34, 7 July 2015 (UTC)

block error
Please correct the block you placed on my WikiNews account. I have been a contributor to Wikimedia for many years, but have had multiple accounts over the years. I am trying to consolidate all of my old accounts with redirects on each old user page and usertalk page to my account pages of " " and " " on each Wikimedia project. Old usertalk content on each wikiproject has been archived at " ." I have successfully consolidated my old accounts on all 11/12 Wikimedia projects, the exception being WikiNews, due to your block. WikiNews still has two duplicate accounts for me that need to be consolidated with redirects. If you can please correct the error of the block so that I can finish there, it would be appreciated, thanks! I cannot edit my or your talkpage nor e-mail you from your userpage on Wikinews due to your block.

Old accounts with redirect links: user:Nicole21532, user:Nicoletapedia, user:AprilNicoleSharp, user:vegaserrana.

Nicole Sharp (talk) 02:40, 8 September 2015 (UTC)


 * Since your account on en.wn has not been blocked from editing-own-talk-page, there is no justification for further hiding the record of discussion by putting it here rather than there. I decline to be drawn into a discussion here that obviously belongs there.  --Pi zero (talk) 11:24, 8 September 2015 (UTC)
 * I was not aware I was able to make any edits whatsoever to WikiNews. Per your request, please see my repost then at "wikinews:User_talk:Nicole_Sharp."  Your block is an error and still needs to be corrected.  Nicole Sharp (talk) 07:48, 24 October 2015 (UTC)
 * FYI, I have also cross-posted the issue to a second WikiNews administrator at "commons:user talk:ShakataGaNai."  Nicole Sharp (talk) 07:55, 24 October 2015 (UTC)
 * doesn't appear to be active, and my post was automatically archived by a bot. I have gone ahead and reposted to "user talk:Bawolff," including a copy/paste of our IRC conversation.  Nicole Sharp (talk) 01:53, 8 November 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 Wikipedia 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) 13:32, 24 November 2015 (UTC)

Real-time collaboration panel at wikimania
Hey there. I'm proposing a panel on real-time collaborative editing at Wikimania this year: https://wikimania2017.wikimedia.org/wiki/Submissions/Waiting_for_Real-Time_Collaboration

Eloquence suggested you would be a good person to have participate, since Wikinews might be a good use case for this sort of functionality. Interested? C. Scott Ananian (talk) 19:23, 10 April 2017 (UTC)


 * It's good of you to think of me. Public speaking... doesn't come naturally to me, so I need to be really well prepared and comfortable with a situation, which clearly can't apply since I've never been to a Wikimania (I wasn't yet involved enough to consider it when Wikimania was held in my extended back yard).  An additional logistical problem is that I have no current passport, having carelessly let it lapse years ago and then gotten much less enthusiastic about resurrecting it after 9/11.  I'm also generally wary of attending any Wikimedian get-together since the Foundation decided to foist this code-of-conduct thing on the communities. Although I've been pouring effort into mitigating certain inadequacies of the wikimedia platform (stuff the Foundation technically could and imho should have done ten years ago, but in practice wouldn't want to do because it wouldn't be consistent with the natural impulse of an institution such as the Foundation to centralize control), I'm not convinced we'd have as much use for collaborative editing at Wikinews as Wikipedia would.  Perhaps I don't fully understand the concept; and I distantly recall there was a bit of experimenting by some Wikinewsies several years ago, so perhaps some currently-less-active Wikinewsies would disagree.  In most cases, though, each individual news article is written by a single reporter &mdash; with multiple reporters, generally there needs to be one author responsible for giving coherence to the whole &mdash; and we've found that review of an individual article usually can't be usefully split between multiple reviewers (off hand I can only think of one major exception in the years I've been on Wikinews) and is nearly impossible to do while an article is undergoing active edits (though very rarely I've started a review while an article on a breaking story was still being written; and there always comes a point where editing has to be frozen for at least a minute or five to complete the review).  --Pi zero (talk) 21:01, 10 April 2017 (UTC)
 * Thanks for the quick response! Interesting background on Wikinews, thanks.  I don't even know if Wikimania's going to accept the panel proposal yet, so this is just starting a discussion right now.  But keep me in the back of your mind, if you could -- if you run across anyone gung-ho about collaborative editing, or remember who it was who did the experimenting with this several years ago, send them my way.  I'd love to talk and hear experiences, even if I can't convince them to sit on a panel at Wikimania. ;) C. Scott Ananian (talk) 03:20, 11 April 2017 (UTC)

Toki Pona : leko TM Lego
Is an archived reference to an old version of the inventor's website reading "leko TM Lego" proof enough ? http://web.archive.bibalex.org/web/20021001230309/http://www.tokipona.org/etym.php PieterJansegers (talk) 21:11, 3 December 2019 (UTC)

Suggestion
I was wondering what you think of an idea of mine. Well, I was thinking that we might decide to make a special section for 'brief ' stories, just a paragraph or two summarising an event that is published very quickly. This way, we could write about a much higher proportion of stories. Is this a kind of dane idea, and ,if it is, what should I do with it, Qwerty number1 (talk) 00:08, 4 January 2019 (UTC).
 * That idea was tried on en.wn, but modernly doesn't work well and we discourage it. It's still in our site documentation, as a possible article type.  Despite its plausibility in the abstract, it turns out to be unwieldy and ultimately inefficient to write and to review compared to a number of small standalone articles, hence its fall into disuse. --Pi zero (talk) 00:54, 4 January 2019 (UTC)
 * Thanks, is it still used in wikinews, Qwerty number1 (talk) 14:38, 4 January 2019 (UTC).

Talk pages consultation 2019
The Wikimedia Foundation has invited the various Wikimedia communities, including the English Wikipedia, to participate in a consultation on improving communication methods within the Wikimedia projects. As such, a request for comment has been created at Talk pages consultation 2019. You are invited to express your views in the discussion. ~ Winged Blades Godric 05:21, 24 February 2019 (UTC)

MEOWCAT™️
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A diehard editor (talk) 07:00, 29 July 2019 (UTC) 

Sadly deceased
To anyone concerned, please see Wikinews mourns loss of volunteer John Shutt. -- Jules (Mrjulesd) 15:43, 26 February 2021 (UTC)
 * What a loss, especially for Wikinews. He made over 56,000 edits there before his death. Very sad. -Cupper52Discuss! 12:42, 1 March 2021 (UTC)
 * yes very much so, I think he wrote something like a thousand stories. Also a big loss for Wikibooks, see b:Wikibooks:Reading room/General. -- Jules (Mrjulesd) 08:30, 4 March 2021 (UTC)
 * I only just seen this sad news - the only interaction with me was that Pi zero unblocked me on Wikinews due to the "overly exuberant abuse filter" as seen in this section on an archive of Zzuuzz's talk page. A great Wikinews volunteer missed. Iggy  ( Swan ) (Contribs) 20:45, 9 June 2021 (UTC)

Sad
This is sad that he died. May he rest in peace. 64.121.103.144 (talk) 17:31, 23 April 2021 (UTC)
 * Rest in peace Dr John Nathan Shutt! CAPTAIN RAJU (T) 17:55, 4 May 2021 (UTC)