User talk:Steve Blincoe/TWA





Welcome
Hi ! Welcome to our fantastic collaborative project, where editors build articles based upon reliable sources and help each other to make those articles full of great, neutral information.

I thought it might be helpful for your trip to have a place where you can ask questions along the way. There's a special place called the Teahouse, where you can ask any question you have about editing and get friendly help from trusted hosts. We'd like to have you as a guest. Drop by for a cup of tea anytime!


 * Teahouse

Great to have you on board! --WillKomen (talk) 



Welcome
Hi ! Welcome to our fantastic collaborative project, where editors build articles based upon reliable sources and help each other to make those articles full of great, neutral information.

I thought it might be helpful for your trip to have a place where you can ask questions along the way. There's a special place called the Teahouse, where you can ask any question you have about editing and get friendly help from trusted hosts. We'd like to have you as a guest. Drop by for a cup of tea anytime!


 * Teahouse

Great to have you on board! --WillKomen (talk)

Steve Blincoe (talk) 21:25, 2 January 2020 (UTC)

A riddle
I ponder a riddle for the few with clue, how do we know what on Wikipedia is true? --SocraTease (talk)

Reliable sources
Hi ! I put this information on the Earth article talk page. It's some sources I found. Which one should we use? I'm so glad you're still with me on this. We rock! --GaiaGirl86 (talk)

Thanks! What now?
Hey, it's me again. I flew around the world but now I'm back on Wikipedia. Thanks so much for adding the information to the article. What do we do now though? What if someone wants to check the source themselves, how will they know where to go? --GaiaGirl86 (talk)

The answer to your question is within
Wikipedia has our preferences, and number one is high quality references. Enjoy these intellectual libations, drink your knowledge from inline citations. --SocraTease (talk)