User:SMcCandlish

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Self-convenience: {{User:SMcCandlish/sandbox list}} – User:SMcCandlish/Status

{{Subpages|1=All subpages of this page}} – {{Subpages|1=All subpages of my talk page|page=User talk:SMcCandlish}}.

File:SMcCandlish 248x248 profile pic.jpg|Robert Downey Jr.|Steve Buscemi|Rachel Maddow|Jeffrey Dean Morgan|Steven Tyler|Colin Farrell|The Edge (like 20 years ago)|Robert Carlyle|Gary Oldman|...}}]]Coincidentally, I was briefly a tech roadie for Aerosmith (Tyler's band) in 1994; they were probably the first band to do live online chat stuff with fans backstage at shows. A colleague and I were in charge of that.File:Wikipedia-lolcat.jpg{{clear|right}}

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{{User:SMcCandlish/Userboxes under Babelbox}}

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{{User:SMcCandlish/On the Radar}}

Hi!

I am {{big|Stanton McCandlish}} (often referred to as just SMcC here and some have nicknamed me Mac, which I don't mind). I am a Web developer, IT consultant, nonfiction author, civil liberties activist and nonprofit executive, as well as amateur pocket billiards (pool) instructor, genealogist, former online news editor, policy analyst, archivist, independent publisher, and also an amateur artist, among other things. I have been among the most active, avid Wikipedians. I have a B.A. in anthropology and communication (a custom minor that combines linguistics and broader human communication, including journalism, PR, and media criticism). I am a US citizen, but have lived in England, Ireland, and Canada for extended periods, and learned to read and write in the UK (and I use something of a form of Mid-Atlantic English consequently). I have competence in an odd assortment of topics, like Celtic mythology, English grammar and usage, Manx cats, New Mexican culture, US law in certain fields (freedom of expression, privacy, and intellectual property), salamanders, Web standards, UI usability, albinism, pool and billiards, online media, Art Nouveau, post-punk subcultures, Mac OS X, Highland dress, and various fiction franchises (though about 95% of my reading time is non-fiction), among other subjects. Being an autodidactic polymath, my interests shift over time and are intense. Some of my latest passions are the history of tartan, interface of zoology and anthropology, especially the history and nature of domestication; and shifting patterns of English usage.

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My current local time is {{#time: h:i A | {{#expr:{{Current daylight saving offset in Western US and Canada}}-8}} hours }} ({{purge|reload}}).

{{User:SMcCandlish/Personal}}

Wikitivities

{{User:SMcCandlish/Stats}}

=What I'm working on now...=

...when time permits:

{{Currentlybox|Tartan}}

| {{Currentlybox|WikiProject Cue sports|wplink=yes}}

==Incomplete articles==

{{collapse top|"Incubator" of new or maybe-to-be-restored articles in progress}}

{{User:SMcCandlish/Incubator}}

{{collapse bottom}}

==Wikipedia-namespace pages==

= Stuff I've been largely responsible for or heavily involved in =

==Projects==

==Articles==

{{User Good Articles2|3}}{{clear}}

I devote most of my mainspace time to improving poor articles to be encyclopedic quality, rather than "polishing the chrome" on already-good articles. Both kinds of work are necessary, but I find working on Stub, Start, and C-class articles, to move them toward B, A, and Good class, is a higher priority for the project. (To date, I have little interest in Good-to-Featured improvement; that's a wiki-subculture all its own.)

=== Overhauled ===

Pre-existing pages I've done a lot of work on (over time or all at once); new list started January 2018, so very incomplete:

  • Girls Under Glass – band article which I redid top to bottom, from a broken-English list of bullet points into a comprehensive article (with some help from the German Wikipedia page on them). This cleanup and expansion [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Girls_Under_Glass&type=revision&diff=871886281&oldid=869502255&diffmode=source] (about 23K more material) saved it from WP:AFD.
  • Godwin's law – I informally shepherded this page for quite some time, before other editors got more involved in keeping it encyclopedic. (I have a potential conflict of interest, since I worked at the same organization as its namesake back in the 1990s.) I've more recently (2023) returned to cleaning it up, as it started to get crufty again.
  • Jeannette H. Lee – Korean-American businesswoman article. I originally nominated this for deletion, but after it was kept as (marginally) notable, I [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jeannette_H._Lee&type=revision&diff=810706688&oldid=810692569&diffmode=source significantly worked up the article] so it will be properly encyclopedic.
  • Khes – iffy article on an Indic fabric type and garment, written by a non-native English speaker, and with poor sourcing. Was already slated for AfD by someone, but I managed to [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Khes&type=revision&diff=992257544&oldid=992142887&diffmode=source massage it into passable shape] (a quality edit more than a quantity one). Still had issues (as of December 2020), but I drew attention to the page at the wikiprojects and noticeboards for India- and Pakistan-related topics.
  • Lynette Horsburgh – British amateur cue-sports champion. Was AfDed, so I [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lynette_Horsburgh&type=revision&diff=821356422&oldid=821246195&diffmode=source improved it] (diff includes a few intervening edits by someone else), and it was kept. Not a massive overhaul, but a qualitative one.
  • Mora, New Mexico [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mora%2C_New_Mexico&type=revision&diff=822329813&oldid=820259078]; Mora County, New Mexico [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mora_County%2C_New_Mexico&type=revision&diff=822329828&oldid=814236406]; First Battle of Mora [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=First_Battle_of_Mora&type=revision&diff=822329842&oldid=803410220]; Second Battle of Mora [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Second_Battle_of_Mora&type=revision&diff=822329862&oldid=792499512] – were palimpsests of confusing drive-by edits, so I re-did them all with everything where it actually pertains, copyedited, and with some new sources.
  • Nithyananda – a controversial modern guru of India. For a long time, this article was veering back and forth between a WP:BLP-violating attack page and a shameless promotional advertisement by his followers (whom I attempted to dissuade from further WP policy violations, both on-wiki and by contacting his organization directly). I overhauled it repeatedly, and watchdogged it for months until sufficient attention from other neutral editors was drawn to it. (Problems still arise, but they are much more manageable now.)
  • Tartan – totally overhauled from top to bottom, using pretty much every available reliable source.
  • Splits so far include Regimental tartan, with Tartan design and manufacture next, to be followed by Clan tartan (presently a redir to main article).

==Wikipedia policies, guidelines, essays, and proposals==

{{User:SMcCandlish/Essays}}{{User:SMcCandlish/Proposals}}

==Major templates==

  • {{tl|rp}} (The template that kept us from doing awful things when citing the same source many times in the same article. Came to me in a flash after User:Fuhghettaboutit bemoaned how many lines were created by citing the same book for so many entries at Glossary of cue sports terms. For many years it was probably the most widely used of the "support" templates for our source citation system. Later improvements to MediaWiki's handling of the {{xtag|ref}} system, with the addition of the {{para|ref}} parameter, eventually made this template obsolete. (See [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3ASMcCandlish&diff=1161904975&oldid=1161900343 this diff] for a crash course in using {{para|ref}}.)
  • {{tl|compact TOC}} as we now know it (There were many radically different templates of this sort, and I merged all of them and their features and added many new ones.)
  • {{tl|glossary}}, {{tl|term}}, {{tl|defn}} (See also MOS:GLOSSARIES.)
  • {{tl|em}}, {{tl|strong}}, {{tl|var}}, {{tl|kbd}}, {{tl|samp}}, {{tl|dfn}} and most of the rest of :Category:Semantic markup templates
  • {{tl|' "}}, {{tl|" '}}, {{tl|" ' "}}, {{tl|-'}}, {{tl|'-}}, {{tl|-"}} and {{tl|"-}} (quotation-mark kerning templates)
  • {{tl|hatnote inline}} (and Module:Hatnote inline) and its derivative {{tl|crossreference}} ({{tl|crossref}}, {{tl|xref}})
  • {{tl|cue sports}} navbox
  • {{tl|WikiProject Cue sports}}, {{tl|WikiProject New Mexico}}, and several others
  • {{tl|TfR}}, {{tl|TfR2}}, {{tl|TfR notice}}
  • {{tl|fake heading}} – Built a flexible, unified template out of code originally at that page and at {{tnull|fakeheader}} and {{tnull|fake header}}, with new features added.
  • {{tl|sfnref inline}}
  • {{tl|page range}} – accessibility/utility template (temporary, i.e. intended to be subst'd)
  • Loads more, I just fire and forget (literally – I'm often surprised to look in a template's history and see that I created it and don't remember).

==Categories==

  • {{cl|Cue sports}} (I created and have been one of the most active maintainers of most of its subcategories.)
  • {{cl|Insular ecology}} (I didn't write the articles in it, I just noticed they were scattered about and not categorized sanely, so now they are.)
  • {{cl|Highland dress}} (No category for this for years for some reason; I organised the articles and have been working on them intensively, starting with Tartan and History of the kilt.)
  • Lots that I'm forgetting.

==User scripts==

These are internal user scripts (for use by logged-in editors in their Special:Mypage/common.js), not external scripts as used by Tampermonkey, Greasemonkey, etc.

  • User:SMcCandlish/TidyRefs – Clean up inconsistent ... formatting. All-new script (2024); has some pretty incredible regex in it, and more is forthcoming when I get back into this project.
  • User:SMcCandlish/TidyCitations – Clean up inconsistent {{cite ... |...}} formatting. Based on earlier scripts by Sam Sailor, Zyxw, Meteor sandwich yum, and Waldir, development of the latest of which ceased in 2018.
  • User:SMcCandlish/MOSNUMdates.js - Convert dates to DMY or MDY. Forked from original version by Ohconfucius (still being developed as of January 2024); mine avoids cluttering the left menu with options that are almost never needed, and enables one that is needed often enough.
  • meta:User:SMcCandlish/userinfo – Show some basic user info underneath usernames at the top of user and user-talk pages. Based on a script by PleaseStand, development of which ceased in 2019.

==Non-admin closures==

Just started tracking this in September 2017 (and then forgot until early 2020). I sometimes do non-admin closure of discussions (RfCs, RMs, etc.) and push right up to the boundary of what a non-admin can do, with that I believe are positive results.

  • Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Wikipedia:Toy portals (2020-01-30)
  • Disruptive-turning RfC on whether the US dollar "really" is a fiat currency: [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AUnited_States_dollar&type=revision&diff=803060223&oldid=803037327 permalink] – someone barnstarred me for this one. (2017-09-30)
  • Nationality of Jose Antonio Vargas: [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Jose_Antonio_Vargas&oldid=799875308#RfC:_Nationality.2Fcitizenship permalink to discussion and closure] (2017-09-10)

==Misc.==

  • Some shortcuts that seem like they should have been there forever weren't, and were created by me. I usually forget, but a few important ones are WP:ARCA [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=537307807&diff=prev&diffmode=source], WP:AEIS [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=672542658&diff=prev&diffmode=source], and WP:SANCTIONGAME / WP:SANCTIONGAMING [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=700896242&diff=prev&diffmode=source],[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=845082751&diff=prev&diffmode=source].

=Gallery of contributed images=

Some of the images I've contributed under GFDL/CC (and sometimes PD) are displayed as thumbnails in my Gallery Page.

=To-do list=

Honestly, I no longer maintain or even look at this; there's so much to do, I just do whatever grabs my attention first.

{{Todo}}

=Wikawards=

{{User:SMcCandlish/Barnstars}}

= What I'm up to in general on Wikipedia =

On Wikipedia, I mostly do the following in lieu of large-scale article authorship (though I do have some major ones planned and three under my belt):

  1. Resisting poorly-thought-out attempts to change the WP:Manual of Style and other policies and guidelines
  2. Neutralizing (sometimes subtle/crafty) PoV-pushing by tagteams of editors with a conflict of interest who try to bend Wikipedia into a promotional or advocacy outlet
  3. More broadly, reverting and repairing vandalism and other intentionally anti-encyclopedic edits, especially those by religious or other zealots, slanderers, the foul-mouthed, and the discriminatory
  4. Making substantial contributions to existing articles (and sometimes creating new ones) on topics I know a lot about
  5. Shepherding the growth and health of some particular articles that need it (and, in some but not all cases, about which I care a lot)
  6. Correcting typos, grammar errors and readability problems
  7. Weeding out unverifiable, or incredible and unsourced, claims
  8. Adding missing salient information
  9. Moving articles that violate the WP article naming conventions
  10. Correcting outright factual errors
  11. Improving cross-references, categorization, etc.
  12. Improving consistency of formatting
  13. Removing redundant wikilinks
  14. Removing pointless (Wikipedia is not a dictionary!) wikilinks – everyone already knows what "eye" and "the sun" mean, in most contexts in which they appear
  15. Removing minor, childish quasi-vandalism (smart-aleck remarks in articles, etc.) – I like to document these in the Talk pages, since they often are actually funny
  16. Tagging outright vandals' talk pages with countdown-to-blocking warnings
  17. Repairing semi-vandalism edits in the form of deletions of long-standing passages without explanation, or the inexplicable addition of large chunks of questionably relevant or unsourced alleged facts, especially attacks against living article subjects, fanwanking and crackpotism.
  18. Copyediting, encyclopedizing and formalizing any juvenile, colloquial, non-neutral or poorly thought out language in articles
  19. Fixing miscellaneous "bad stuff" - vanity/marketing language, crystalballing, etc.
  20. Proposing (and sometimes performing) merges of redundant articles
  21. Adding obvious missing redirects and making sure they go to useful places
  22. Educating misinformed arguments (per logic or Wikipedia policy) on talk pages
  23. Trying to resolve circular disputes on talk pages
  24. Defending articles from AfD when the reasoning for the deletion is specious, especially "NN per nom" me-tooism.
  25. Nominating truly atrocious crap for AfD (or for SD, or just prod'ing them)
  26. Learning a lot concerning things I didn't know about, on all sorts of topics
  27. Having a good time!

{{User:SMcCandlish/Userboxes}}

{{WikimediaAllLicensing}}

= Where I am in Wikispace =

{{User:SMcCandlish/Iw-matrix}}

::*[https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/buglist.cgi?emailcc1=1&emailreporter1=1&emaillongdesc1=1&emailtype1=substring&query_format=advanced&emailassigned_to1=1&email1=SMcCandlish SMcCandlish] at the MediaWiki Bugzilla server

=Potential conflicts of interest=

Just as a matter of full disclosure, there are certain articles I should not heavily edit (i.e., other than to revert vandalism, provide sources, or otherwise adjust in an entirely neutral manner), because of unintentional potential for conflict of interest or non-neutral point of view. Other editors may wish to examine carefully any edits I ever make to any of the following topics:

  • Stanton McCandlish – Me; while I might conceivably pass WP:GNG and WP:BIO, I have no article, have never had one, and {{em|don't want one}} - that would be a bit creepy to me, and friends with articles say they just cause trouble for them (personal attacks, misinformation, etc.), and I helped one get theirs deleted to protect their privacy. McCandlish Consulting is also me (d/b/a) and also non-notable.
  • Protecting Yourself Online – I co-authored a book by this title, {{ISBN|9780062515124}}; it has no article and is surely not notable enough to have one.
  • Wilcox–McCandlish law – [https://web.archive.org/web/20081104042821/https://w2.eff.org/Net_culture/Folklore/Humor/wilcox-mccandlish.law something amusing] that a colleague (Bryce Wilcox) and I came up with in the 1990s. Someone else created an article about it here, before I even became a WP editor; it was subsequently deleted on notability grounds, and should probably stay that way, though it might make a good WP:Essay, as it applies to talk pages here.

;Things I could vaguely, conceivably have a conflict of interest on, due to past connections:

  • Too many clients to individually list here (and some are covered by NDAs anyway); I know better than to edit articles about them.
  • CryptoRights Foundation (CRF) – I was their volunteer CCO/Communications Director for several years, starting 2003; it bugged me somethin' fierce that it did not have an article until recently, but it seemed grossly inappropriate to even start a "just the facts" stub on it, and someone else finally did)
  • Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) – Held various job titles there, including Program Dir., Communications Dir., etc., and was editor of their EFFector newsletter, and the webmaster of eff.org, 1993–2002.
  • Blue Ribbon Online Free Speech Campaign – This was largely my brainchild, as a part of my professional life at EFF; it was an EFF project not a personal one.
  • University of New Mexico (UNM) - Alma mater, 1991–1993 and 2007–2010; former employer, 1992–1993.
  • Double Rainbow (ice cream) – Former employer, 1991.
  • Wal-Mart – Former employer, late 1980s.
  • Cannon Air Force Base, United States Air Force – Former employer, late 1980s; I was a civilian worker, not military personnel.

Things and stuff

=Funniest things I've seen on Wikipedia=

:[emphasis added when salient]

  • Wikipedia:Not everything needs a navbox
    {{in5}}The content itself isn't funny, but the fact that more than 50% of the content of the page is a huge navbox is hilarious.

    • {{tq|1="WP:ANI is like a huge orgy. It's fun to watch, and sometimes it's fun to join in, but like any orgy, the larger it gets, the greater the chances are that someone will eventually try to stick a dick in your ass."}}
      {{in5}}{{small|1=— Slakr (talk), at 03:52, 19 March 2009 (UTC), User:Slakr/Admin coaching [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Slakr/Admin_coaching&oldid=278266153]}}

      • {{tq|1=11:07, 26 March 2007 83.253.36.136 (Talk) (→Performance of FAT 32 - moved spam down)}}
        {{in5}}An edit summary from Wikipedia:Village pump (policy). Needless to say, the next editor's summary read "deleted spam".

        • [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk%3AAttribution%2FPoll&diff=117966928&oldid=117942255 A diff that must be seen to be believed]
          {{in5}}Someone upset about grammar flames that were wasting people's time and being a distraction {{em|posts a distracting time-waste in the form of a longwinded and meticulously-researched grammar flame about it}} (plus a second shorter one!), all in support of the grammar flaming of the starter of the grammar flame; in the process, re-opening debate to yet more grammar flaming in the pointless sub-thread being complained about (dormant for over a day), and to which the poster was not even a party to begin with. I couldn't make this stuff up!

          • {{tq|1=05:46, 21 February 2007 Gracenotes (Talk {{!}} contribs) (→Template:Barnstars - *stabs kittens*)}}
            {{in5}}[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia%3ATemplates_for_deletion%2FLog%2F2007_February_21&action=historysubmit&diff=109750954&oldid=109748737 An edit summary] in response to "no, don't delete the barnstars!" panic replies to a TfD on a useless template simply relating to barnstars. I awarded Gracenotes a Barnstar Point for that one.

            • "Hotel Wikipedia"
              {{in5}}A song parody by various Wikimedians (to the tune of The Eagles' "Hotel California"). I hate filk, with a passion, yet I somehow loved this.

              • [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:112.198.219.142&action=history Possibly the worst ever of my own typos]. (See edit summary used.)
                {{in5}}I think I was channeling Ancient Finnish or something.

                • {{tq|1="Karl Marx, founder of modern Marxism ...."}}
                  {{in5}}in Animal Farm, as of [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Animal_Farm&action=historysubmit&diff=337560999&oldid=336834044 13 January 2010 version] (we all know that {{em|ancient}} Marxism was of course founded by Marxus Aurelius, right?)

                  • [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AGolf_%28billiards%29&diff=143815718&oldid=143070514 From the "unclear on the concept" department]
                    {{in5}}Rather remarkable definition of "watch your language".

                    • Hairy ball theorem
                      {{in5}}Perhaps the funniest real article name on Wikipedia. (It's a real math/physics theorem, and not intrinsically funny, though a bit amusing.)

                      • [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Manual_of_Style_%28linking%29&oldid=387587756#Link_.22dilution.22 Unbelievably selective evidence]
                        {{in5}}Someone concerned about overlinking in articles actually used the Professional wrestling article as alleged smoking-gun "proof" of rampant overlinking across Wikpedia, requiring (naturally) much more stringent anti-linking wording in WP:LINKING. Of course that article in particular would have overlinking, along with just about every other noob error, except when periodically cleaned up by experienced, neutral editors who don't believe in fairytales. The article is clearly indicative of nothing but the nature of that topic's fanbase (and thus its most frequent editorial pool).

                        • {{tq|1="Presumably we're talking about Life on Mars (TV series) here? John Carter 20:56, 13 April 2007 (UTC)}}"
                          {{in5}}A comment posted at WP:COUNCIL/P, on a proposal for a "WikiProject Life on Mars"; if you don't get why this is hysterically funny, just move on – it's an old-school sci-fi geek thing.

                          • Very strange [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template_talk%3ATodo&diff=118207029&oldid=116716220 font activism vandalism of my sig] at a talk page
                            {{in5}}Did you know ... that there are not just regular vandals but ones with really, really weird agendas lurking in Wikipedia?

                            • http://www.well.com/~mech/WP/FunnyWikipediaCaptcha.jpg
                              {{in5}}I'm not sure Wikipedia's account-creation CAPTCHA database should include every word... >;-)

=Smartest things I've seen on Wikipedia=

Just a few particularly well-thought-out bits by other editors. They aren't necessarily mindblowing or anything, just insightful and well-put.

  1. {{tq|1="We must always do what is best for the readers, without exception. Per WP:IAR if a 'rule' prevents you from improving the encyclopaedia, ignore it ... and if you put your personal preferences above the readers then Wikipedia is not the project for you."}}
    {{in5}}{{small|1=— Thryduulf (talk), at 10:52, 4 June 2018 (UTC) [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Thryduulf&diff=prev&oldid=844353194&diffmode=source] in user talk, and in that instance about deleting redirects that are actually useful to readers but which don't quite fit someone's preferred formula.}}

    1. {{tq|1="My impression is that we shouldn't allow users going against a policy to affect how it is written. People going around changing articles against policy isn't a good reason to have that policy be rewritten"}}
      {{in5}}{{small|1=Lee Vilenski (talkcontribs) 10:40, 30 October 2023 (UTC) [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Snooker&curid=16580392&diff=1182617599&oldid=1182449664]. Slightly copyedited for clarity.}}

      1. {{tq|1="Unless you can reliably and usefully tell editors how to identify a problematic case, it's generally not helpful to mention it in a policy. It ends up backfiring, as editors make up their own, mutually incompatible definitions and proclaim that their interpretation is the true one."}}
        {{in5}}{{small|1=WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:07, 3 December 2023 (UTC) [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk%3ANo_original_research&diff=1188192049&oldid=1188189301]}}

        1. {{tq|1="{{U|Tony1|Tony}}, your writing guides were what prompted me to start getting articles up to GA back in mid-2012. I've done over 100 since (still waiting to actually get a FAC passed solo, maybe next decade) ...."}}
          {{in5}}{{small|1=— User:Ritchie333 (talk), at 21:57, 2 January 2018 (UTC) [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Tony1&diff=next&oldid=818318778]. While this is well-deserved praise for the how-to essay series in support of WP:MOS by Tony1 (which starts here), this also gets at why style on Wikipedia is not trivia or trivial.}}

          1. {{tq|1="I ... had no problem whatsoever learning wikicode when I started writing and improving encyclopedia articles in 2009. I do not want to learn new software features that are less productive and less intuitive than old software features. I welcome any upgrades that are entirely intuitive and non-disruptive to existing editors. I will oppose ill-conceived and poorly-implemented make-work projects for professional programmers. This is not an employment program for coders. It is an encyclopedia created by volunteers, who are article writers and researchers."}}
            {{in5}}{{small|1=— Cullen (talk), 18:40, 29 November 2015 (UTC), Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Breakfast#RFC - Remove Flow from WikiProject Breakfast? [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Topic:Stn15z0u230zcbve&topic_showPostId=stn793gtw9uuckrr#flow-post-stn793gtw9uuckrr] (commenting on how testing WP:Flow, WMF's new forum software intended to replace talk pages, pretty much destroyed the wikiproject that agreed to test it.}}

            1. {{tq|1="I reverted to the version before the diff you cited [i.e., the addition of disputed material], but was reverted. Changes pushed through without consensus are likely to be ignored or constantly disputed, so there's actually no point in doing this."}}
              {{in5}}{{small|1=— SarahSV (talk) 04:51, 27 January 2016 (UTC) Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style/Images#RfC: Should the guideline maintain the "As a general rule" wording or something similar? [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk%3AManual_of_Style%2FImages&type=revision&diff=701889033&oldid=701883523]}}

              1. {{tq|1="Revert rules should not be construed as an entitlement or inalienable right to revert, nor do they endorse reverts as an editing technique.
                {{in5}}Passed 9 to 0."}}
                {{in5}}{{small|1=— Arbitration Committee, 22:47, 23 March 2012 (UTC) Article titles and capitalisation, Final Decision}}

                1. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement&diff=prev&oldid=552072928 Perhaps the most cogent explanation to date of what wikiproject banners are really for] (and it's not advertising projects) by {{U|WhatamIdoing}}, at WP:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement, 06:00, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
                2. Roughtly 95%-accurate Observations on Wikipedia behavior by {{u|Antandrus}}, 12 March 2016 (may have been revised since then)
                3. {{tq|1="A small group is more likely to develop a self-reinforcing delusion that their position is reasonable, even when a large number of people outside the group are telling them otherwise."}}
                  {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|Gigs}}, 12 June 2013, in Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2013-06-12/Op-ed, "The tragedy of Wikipedia's commons".}}

                  1. {{tq|1="Nearly all our policies are driven by the need to prevent ... abuse of Wikipedia. Policies on biographies of living people are driven largely by those who would abuse Wikipedia for purposes of defamation. Policies on neutrality and verifiability have been largely driven by the need to address those who were here to push a political agenda or promote their fringe viewpoints. What Wikipedia is not is pretty much a chronicle of all the things that people have tried to use Wikipedia for that the community has decided are detrimental to a quality encyclopedia. ... This isn't censorship, it's curation."}}
                    {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|Gigs}}, 12 June 2013, in Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2013-06-12/Op-ed, "The tragedy of Wikipedia's commons".}}

                    1. {{tq|1="[C]onsensus is an outcome of discussion, not a type of discussion. Editors' comments contribute to the consensus-building process."}}
                      {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|David Levy}}, 11:49, 6 March 2012 (UTC), at Wikipedia talk:Today's featured list#Renaming and re-stylizing Today's Featured List?, [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Today%27s_featured_list&diff=next&oldid=480474037 accessed March 11, 2012]}}

                      1. {{tq|1="If rules make you nervous and depressed, and not desirous of participating in the wiki, then ignore them entirely and go about your business."}}
                        {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|Koyaanis Qatsi}}, [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Historical_archive/RulesToConsider&oldid=277053 04:00, 18 September 2001 (UTC)]; it is the original formulation of WP:Ignore all rules.}}

                        1. {{tq|1="Any pile of bullshit decomposes naturally."}}
                          {{in5}}{{small|1=— Wikipedia:Ignore all dramas (as of [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Ignore_all_dramas&oldid=374344047 this version]), on ignoring instead of responding to wiki-stupidity. Later versions had it as the far less pithy {{tq|1="Even the largest pile of bullshit will decompose on its own."}} The original formulation was {{tq|1="The most copiously deposited bullshit decomposes on its own."}} I reverted it to the concise version on 10 August 2011‎ and it seems to have stuck.}}

                          1. {{tq|1="Removed older logo. One logo is sufficient. Logos are copyrighted and Wikipedia should not serve as a gallery for logos."}}
                            {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|Farine}}, 05:59, 6 May 2008 (UTC) ([http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Data_East&action=historysubmit&diff=210510481&oldid=210358615 edit summary] at Data East)}}

                            1. {{tq|1="Anyone who adds material to an article, but cannot be bothered to cite any sources, is being discourteous to the other editors who later have to try to find reliable sources."}}
                              {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|Dalbury}} 11:42, 24 January 2007 (UTC) (Wikipedia talk:Speedy deletion criterion for unsourced articles#Userfy is a good option, accessed January 31, 2007)}}

                              1. {{tq|1="Of course, the point of style is to give coherence and consistency, deviations from which can detract from the publication's voice (in this case, an encyclopedic voice)."}}
                                {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|Ninly}}, 06:38, 8 May 2009 (UTC) (Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style, accessed June 2, 2009), on the real purpose and value of the Wikipedia Manual of Style.}}

                                1. {{tq|1="Show the door to trolls, vandals, and wiki-anarchists, who, if permitted, would waste your time and create a poisonous atmosphere here."}}
                                  {{in5}}{{small|1=— WP co-founder Larry Sanger, on Wikipedia:Etiquette}}

                                  1. {{tq|1="[N]o need for bullet points – detail here is no more important than others"}}
                                    {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|SilkTork}}, 10:19, 27 June 2011 (UTC) ([http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia%3AArticle_size&action=historysubmit&diff=436471234&oldid=436469159 edit summary] at Wikipedia:Article size), on the problem that too many editors create bulletized lists from normal prose, as if Wikipedia were a giant PowerPoint presentation.}}

                                    1. {{tq|1="While the title should be recognized as a reference to the article topic by someone familiar with the topic, for the uninitiated, it is the purpose of the article lead, not the article title, to identify the topic of the article."}}
                                      {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|Born2cycle}}, 17:25, 26 January 2012 (UTC), Wikipedia talk:Article titles thread "[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk%3AArticle_titles&action=historysubmit&diff=473360585&oldid=473359448 Common names]"}}

                                      1. {{tq|1="The reason Wikipedia has policy pages at all is to store up assertions on which we agree, and which generally convince people when we make them in talk, so we don't have to write them out again and again. This is why policy pages aren't "enforced", but quoted; if people aren't convinced by what policy pages say, they should usually say something else. The major exception to this stability is when some small group, either in good faith or in an effort to become the Secret Masters of Wikipedia, mistakes its own opinions for What Everybody Thinks. This happens, and the clique often writes its own opinions up as policy and guideline pages."}}
                                        {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|JCScaliger}}, sockpuppet of {{User|Pmanderson}}, 03:57, 3 February 2012 (UTC), Wikipedia talk:Article titles thread "[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk%3AArticle_titles&action=historysubmit&diff=474698774&oldid=474681942 Request for edit, Poll]". While Anderson made this point in a WP:POINTy way, sockpuppeting in a discussion he was trying to control (and arguing against me on the details of the issue) he's precisely right, and this was well articulated.}}

                                        1. {{tq|1="If a high-profile [Wikipedian] poll is conducted that brings in widespread participation from editors who had previously stayed away from [the] venue, and the holdouts who had been stonewalling and preventing progress merely slouch, stuff their hands in their pockets, and walk away, then that proves that they knew full well that their arguments were not sufficiently persuasive, or didn’t have sufficient numbers, or both. ... Trying to now torpedo the current consensus by stating that certain people somehow didn’t have an opportunity to participate is nothing but sour grapes .... On Wikipedia it’s called ‘wililawyering’ which is disruptive and mustn’t be rewarded."}}
                                          {{in5}}{{small|1=— {{User|Greg L}}, 00:49, 10 February 2012 (UTC) Wikipedia talk:Article titles thread "[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk%3AArticle_titles&action=historysubmit&diff=476043535&oldid=476042584 Why no action on implementing community consensus]"}}

                                          1. {{tq|1="Some editors seek to be totally neutral, which means they invariably catch the most flak from everyone else."}}
                                            {{in5}}{{small|1=— User:Collect (talk), at 11:38, 30 November 2010 (UTC) [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Sex,_religion_and_politics&oldid=399705554], as a salient point in the essay WP:Sex, religion and politics.}}

                                            1. {{tq|1="[C]onsensus does exist absent an administrator to interpret it."}}
                                              {{in5}}{{small|1=— User:Mackensen (talk), at 04:03, 28 January 2008 (UTC) [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Deletion_review/Adult-child_sex&type=revision&diff=187401005&oldid=187389223&diffmode=source], commenting at a deletion review, on the fact that an WP:XFD or other consensus process does not require formal closure if its decision is clear.}}

                                              1. {{tq|1="Tarage's Second Law: Your most likely to make a grammar error when discussing someone else whose made one."}}
                                                {{in5}}{{small|1=— User:Tarage at a [https://web.archive.org/web/20190427024051/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Tarage%27s_Law now-deleted essay page], c. 2019. (Tarage's First Law there is also wryly amusing and generally correct.)}}

=Smartest Wikipedia-relevant things I've seen from off-site=

  • Transgender activist Leslie Feinberg, 2006:{{cite web |url= http://www.campkc.com/campkc-content.php?Page_ID=225 |title=Transmissions – Interview with Leslie Feinberg |date=28 July 2006 |work=CampCK.com |last=Tyroler |first=Jamie |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20141123060911/http://www.campkc.com/campkc-content.php?Page_ID=225 |archive-date=November 23, 2014 |access-date=17 November 2014}}

{{quote|1={{tq|1=For me, pronouns are always placed within context. I am female-bodied, I am a butch lesbian, a transgender lesbian—referring to me as "she/her" is appropriate, particularly in a non-trans setting in which referring to me as "he" would appear to resolve the social contradiction between my birth sex and gender expression and render my transgender expression invisible. I like the gender neutral pronoun "ze/hir" because it makes it impossible to hold on to gender/sex/sexuality assumptions about a person you're about to meet or you've just met. And in an all trans setting, referring to me as "he/him" honors my gender expression in the same way that referring to my sister drag queens as "she/her" does.}} }}

{{reflist}}

=Allegedly sensible or clever things I've come up with here=

  • {{tq|1=Wikipedia policies are what are required for the project to operate at all; guidelines are what help it operate smoothly; high-acceptance essays are what help its operators not make fools of themselves; and miscellaneous essays are part of the community mindshare that helps shape all of the above over time.}}
    {{in5}}(At WT:Don't bludgeon the process, in a "guidelines vs. essays" thread; 23:31, 30 November 2020 (UTC) [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Don%27t_bludgeon_the_process&type=revision&diff=991611730&oldid=987203211&diffmode=source].
    {{in5}}It's a nutshell version of something I've said, in various words, many times since the late 2000s.)

    • {{tq|1=As of right this moment, Wikipedia (the encyclopedic content, excluding other material like talk pages) is calculable to be approximately {{nts|{{#expr:({{NUMBEROFARTICLES:R}}*601.43*6/(500*2*2*80*50))/32 round 2}}}} times the size of Encyclopædia Britannica.}}
      {{in5}}(The bulk of the math is from User:Tompw/bookshelf/assumptions, but at the time it only calculated how many volumes of EB would be filled by WP.)

      • {{tq|1="WP is a bad place to engage in labelling that isn't absolutely integral to international public perception of the subject."}}
        {{in5}}(In an essay/tutorial at WT:Categorization, 15:39, 9 June 2018 (UTC) [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Categorization/Ethnicity,_gender,_religion_and_sexuality&type=revision&diff=845126796&oldid=845118704&diffmode=source]. Someone suggested[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Categorization/Ethnicity,_gender,_religion_and_sexuality&type=revision&diff=845519122&oldid=845417853&diffmode=source] framing it on their wall! The idea eventually developed into the essay WP:Race and ethnicity.)

        • {{tq|1="[O]ur articles are palimpsests stirred together by a global assortment of geniuses, crackpots, and everyone in between, sometimes citing great stuff, sometimes poor stuff, and sometimes nothing".}}
          {{in5}}(At WT:Manual of Style, 16:49, 24 December 2017 (UTC) [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk%3AManual_of_Style&type=revision&diff=816913903&oldid=816912174]. This was in the context of readers wanting to verify our content with claim-by-claim inline citations not "general references".
          {{in5}}Someone else nominated it as a mot juste and "a gem" [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3ASMcCandlish&type=revision&diff=817434368&oldid=817424793].
          {{in5}}It was later quoted on someone's user page [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Gr%C3%A5bergs_Gr%C3%A5a_S%C3%A5ng&diff=prev&oldid=833071302] along with one by Stephen Fry and another by Neil Gaiman. Pretty good company; I'm honored.)

          • {{tq|1="An attempt at disambiguation that introduces another ambiguity is a failure."}}
            {{in5}}(I say this frequently. I'm not aware of anyone quoting me on it verbatim, but I've seen a rise in the same argument made in other words, and it is having the desired effect on article titles debates at WP:Requested moves.

            • {{tq|1="If MoS does not already have a rule on something, then it almost certainly doesn't need one."}}
              {{in5}}(Included as a corollary at EEng's WP:MOSBLOAT essay.

              • {{tq|1="No line item in our Manual of Style is supported by 100% of editors, and no editor supports 100% of its line items. The same situation is true of all style guides and their scopes and audiences in the wider world. The purpose of a stylebook is to set some ground rules (often arbitrary) so that the ballgame of writing can continue instead of the players standing around on the field brawling about trivia."}}
                {{in5}}(Summary of what I've said in variant wording probably 100 times in style disputes. No one ever tries to refute it.
                {{in5}}This awareness is what keeps our MoS from being a nightmare of editwarring about specific rules, over-inclusion of rules we don't need, deletion of ones we do just because someone doesn't like them, and pretense that no rules are needed.)

                • {{tq|1="The next-to-last resort of someone who cannot muster a rational response to an opposing argument is to wave away that argument as something impossible to respond to (the last resort being {{lang|la|ad hominem}} attacks)."}}
                  {{in5}}(In particular, if you say "TL;DR" to refuse to respond to a cogent argument because it takes work to do so, you are at the wrong site – this one consists almost entirely of millions of pages of detailed and particular text, so if you can't parse a few paragraphs you are incompetent to work on this project.)

                  • {{tq|1="If one grinds an axe long and hard enough, there is no axe any longer, just a useless old stick."}}
                    {{in5}}(A quasi-Taoist response to cranky complaints that relate to incidents so long ago no one should care any more. Compressed version: {{tq|1="Grind axe too long: no axe."}})

                    • {{tq|1="Two words: tea pot. ~~~~"}}
                      {{in5}}(A response to angry accusations of wrong-doing that self-evidently apply at least equally and usually much more accurately to the ranter.
                      {{in5}}More recently, I've used it as a mantra for myself, when I feel wikistressed. It eventually led to the WP:HOTHEADS essay.)

= Nifty Wikipedia tools =

Kind of hard to find unless you already know about them:

== Resources ==

  • [https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Labs Wikimedia Labs] at Mediawiki.org, for general info.
  • [https://wikitech.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Tool_Labs The Tool Labs] at WikiTech.Wikimedia.org, where anyone can create an account to develop tools.
  • [https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Tool_Labs/Collection_of_issues_after_Toolserver_shutdown This page] indicates lost tools and other problems after the demise of the old ToolServer.
  • [https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Special:OAuthListConsumers OAuth] applications list

== Stats tools ==

  • [https://tools.wmflabs.org/xtools-articleinfo/index.php Xtools-articleinfo] at WMFLabs (general page stats, by year and month, with charts, etc.)
  • [https://tools.wmflabs.org/sigma/editorinteract.py?users=SMcCandlish&users=Jimbo_Wales&users=&startdate=&enddate=&ns= editorinteract.py] at WMFLabs – analyzes your interaction with one or more other users
  • [http://vs.aka-online.de/wppagehiststat/ Aka's Page History Stats Tool] – edit-related stats on any article or other page
  • [http://tools.wikimedia.de/~tim/cgi-bin/contribution-counter TDS's Article Contribution Counter] – get stats (with some accuracy lag, usually a few weeks) on who the top editors of an article are
  • [http://tools.wikimedia.de/~interiot/cgi-bin/queries/stub_sense Interiot's StubSense] - what stubs are being used in a category
  • [http://tools.wikimedia.de/~interiot/cgi-bin/offtoolserver/RC_firstonly Interiot's Related Changes Watchlist] – makes "Special:Recentchangeslinked" pages behave like watchlists

== Internal tools ==

  • Special:AllMessages – track down any system message/notice (e.g. copyright warnings you are tired of seeing and want to exclude in your WP:USERCSS.)
  • [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Search&search=&fulltext=Search&profile=advanced Advanced Search] of Wikipedia

== Editing tools ==

{{User:Powergate92/Userboxes/refToolbar}}{{clear|left}}

  • WP:WikEd – syntax-highlighting WP editor (integrated, not external)

==Reference citation tools==

  • WP:RefToolbar 2.0 – reference citation tool
  • [https://citer.toolforge.org/citer.fcgi?dateformat=%25-d+%25B+%25Y&pipeformat=+%7C Citer] at ToolForge.

==Coding tools==

; Lua programming and Scribunto modules:

==Cleanup tools==

  • Reference citation consistency checker (use in sandbox or talk page): {{tlx|ref info|Manx cat|style{{=}}float:right}}

==Visualization tools==

  • vCat – a tool to generate Graphviz diagrams of Wikipedia category relationships. Examples:
  • https://tools.wmflabs.org/vcat/render?wiki=enwiki&category=Cue_sports – Show the entire parent and other "ancestor" category tree structure of :Category:Cue sports (up to the maximum of 250 nodes)
  • https://tools.wmflabs.org/vcat/render?wiki=enwiki&category=Cue_sports&depth=2 – Show just the immediate parent and grandparent categories of :Category:Cue sports
  • https://tools.wmflabs.org/vcat/render?wiki=enwiki&category=Cue_sports&depth=4&algorithm=fdp – Show four levels but as node clusters instead of a tree
  • https://tools.wmflabs.org/vcat/render?wiki=enwiki&category=Cue_sports&rel=subcategory - Show the immediate child subcategories of :Category:Cue sports (this function does not recurse and show child sub-sub-categories, etc.)
  • https://tools.wmflabs.org/vcat/render?wiki=enwiki&category=Cue_sports&rel=subcategory&algorithm=fdp - Show the same, but as a ring graph instead of a tree
  • https://tools.wmflabs.org/vcat/render?wiki=enwiki&title=William_A._Spinks&depth=2&algorithm=fdp - Show a node-cluster ring graph of the parent and grandparent categories of the article William A. Spinks
  • There are various other options, such as: creating links in the graph to the categories shown, or to new graphs starting at those categories; specifying output image format; outputting a text Graphviz .gv file with no node limit, for local rendering; choosing a different wiki, like French Wikipedia, or Wiktionary ([https://tools.wmflabs.org/vcat/render?wiki=enwiktionary&title=chicken&algorithm=fdp&depth=2 example]), or Commons; etc.

== Help and info ==

== Editor interaction analysis ==

  • Editor Interaction Analyzer by Sigma, compares the edits of two to three specified editors to see which articles overlap, sorted by minimum time between edits by both users. Only works on the English Wikipedia. Speed: slow.
  • Intersect Contribs, compares the edits of two to eight editors at any WMF wiki to see which articles overlap. Speed: fast.
  • Intertwined contributions, merges the contributions of two editors at any WMF wiki into a single list. Speed: fast.

==Unsorted additions==

  • Help:Labeled section transclusion – comparatively new feature that most of us don't know how to use yet
  • How to ping people: {{tq|1="The keys are: max 20 pings per edit; and do an edit to clean before before trying a new ping, so the system sees a clean diff; and of course always new four-tilde signature. Dicklyon (talk) 03:45, 15 December 2014 (UTC)"}}
  • [https://tools.wmflabs.org/catscan3/catscan2.php CatScan] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151023045235/http://tools.wmflabs.org/catscan3/catscan2.php |date=2015-10-23 }} category analysis tool
  • [https://tools.wmflabs.org/catscan3/quick_intersection.php CatScan Quick Intersection]
  • [https://www.mediawiki.org/w/index.php?title=Extension:TimedMediaHandler&stable=0&shownotice=1&fromsection=Syntax_synopsis TimedMediaHandler] - a-v in articles
  • Find which Wiki pages link to a particular site [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:LinkSearch&target=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.painjournalonline.com%2F]
  • List changes made recently to pages linked from a specified page [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?namespace=&target=Pain&tagfilter=&days=7&limit=250&title=Special%3ARecentChangesLinked]
  • Readability meter [http://www.read-able.com/]
  • Wikichecker [http://en.wikichecker.com]
  • Emoticons [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Tango_icons#Emotes]
  • [http://tools.wikimedia.de/~daniel/downloads/ Tools for analysis of local MediaWiki installations] (not directly relevant for en.wikipedia)
  • [http://tools.wikimedia.de/~magnus/makeref.php Magnus's Reference Generator] – auto-format several kinds of source citations

{{collapse top|1=Outdated due to the demise of the ToolServer}}

  • Search through a page's history for edits made by a particular user [http://toolserver.org/~snottywong/usersearch.html]
  • List contributors to an article, ranked in order of activity [http://toolserver.org/~daniel/WikiSense/Contributors.php]
  • Find images for a given article, using interwiki links [http://toolserver.org/~daniel/WikiSense/FindImages.php]
  • What pages have you and another edited? [http://toolserver.org/~pietrodn/intersectContribs.php]
  • User's across-projects contributions [http://toolserver.org/~luxo/contributions/contributions.php?]
  • Who wrote that? (Wiki blame) [http://toolserver.org/~tparis/blame/]
  • Fix bare url reflinks [http://toolserver.org/~dispenser/view/Reflinks]
  • X!'s edit count [http://toolserver.org/~tparis/pcount/index.php?name=alanscottwalker&lang=en&wiki=wikipedia]
  • 3RR tool [http://toolserver.org/~slakr/3rr.php]
  • [http://toolserver.org/%7Esoxred93/ec Soxred93's thorough edit counter]
  • [http://toolserver.org/~snottywong/index.html Snottywong's tools] – an array of user & editing statistics and search tools
  • [http://toolserver.org/~snottywong/index.html Snottywong's tools] – an array of user & editing statistics and search tools

{{collapse bottom}}

= Search sites =

  • https://www.refseek.com – more than a billion sources: encyclopedias, monographs, magazines, etc.
  • https://www.worldcat.org – catalogue of 20,000 libraries. Find the nearest rare book you need; get it through inter-library loan at local library
  • https://link.springer.com – over 10 million scientific books, articles, research protocols, etc.
  • https://www.bioline.org.br – library of bioscience journals published in developing countries
  • https://repec.org – 4 million publications on economics and related subjects
  • https://www.science.gov – 2200+ scientific sites; more than 200 million articles indexed
  • https://www.pdfdrive.com – the largest website for free download of books and other works in PDF format; over 225 million titles
  • https://www.base-search.net – over 100 million scientific documents, 70% of them free

= Interesting layouts =

It's possible to do some nice layouts with CSS – carefully – inside the "shell" that MediaWiki provides. Just of use on project and user pages, of course. We don't do stuff like this in articles.

= Security =

{{User:SMcCandlish/GPG key}}{{small|
}}

{{User committed identity|a6d331de87bb595541d03acf814f68f05abde44b5c3c79e078a3b79ceabf093696dcb01a3570d6eceedb21c6e8c33f4d41649bf9c05864a474974fcc4eec54be|SHA-512|article=a}}

= Bureaucracy =

== Systemic mega-dramas of 2020 onward ==

== [[WP:ARBCOM|ArbCom]] ==

== Some of the more nebulous WMF bureaucracy ==

=Buh-bye!=