Slashdot Mirror


Larry Sanger on Wikipedia and World

Phoe6 writes "MIT Tech Review is running an article on Larry Sanger, an epistemologist and the co-creator of Wikipedia. It is very interesting to know his views on Wikipedia. He says, 'To build a public encyclopedia, you don't need faith in the possibility of knowledge, What you have to have faith in is human beings being able to work together.'"

32 of 246 comments (clear)

  1. How to stop revert wars? by LostCluster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What he seems most upset about is the problem of "revert wars" happening whenever an author wants to be the absolute authority on a topic and regularly patrols their article to undo any edits that are made to what they consider their "perfect" work?

    What could they do to defuse these situations with a moderations scheme that encurages contributors but discurage this kind of abuse?

    1. Re:How to stop revert wars? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It may sound silly, but there is no good way to arrive at a universally agreed upon "truth". Every source of information has bias, and it's ridiculous to pretend as though this is not the case.
      The problem with Wikipedia is that the bias is inconsistent. That is, if the bias was consistently left or right or Zoroastrian or what not, then it would be easier to understand Wikipedia's articles. There would be a frame of reference -- you could perceive it for what it was. However, with no particular leaning, any individual article could be the result of any individual person with an axe to grind. I prefer a website with a single consistent bias to one with wildly unpredictable ones.
      How could we go about creating a website with a consistent bias? A simple Slashdot-like mod points system would work wonders.

    2. Re:How to stop revert wars? by Billy+the+Mountain · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Here's an idea. Perhaps a revert war is should be viewed as information itself. So for each article, there's a volatility index useful for identifying contraversial subjects. If you notice that an article has high volatility and are interested in examining it, you can see a history of the article over time.

      BTM

      --
      That was the turning point of my life--I went from negative zero to positive zero.
    3. Re:How to stop revert wars? by aldoman · · Score: 3, Interesting



      First of all, the concept of a community-built encyclopedia, open to submissions and revisions from users, is wonderful. It's much like open-source, in fact, and Wikipedia certainly exemplifies how to reapply the OS model to other contexts.

      However, the contexts of encyclopedias and software are different. Significantly so. I'm interested specifically in quality control- you know when code doesn't work when it doesn't compile or results in unexpected behavior.

      In what ways can a Wiki article be bad, and how can one tell? Do you think QC is a large issue for Wikipedia, and do you have any plans to further integrate the community in the QC process (perhaps akin to the slashdot moderation/metamoderation system)?

    4. Re:How to stop revert wars? by Long-EZ · · Score: 4, Interesting

      First, I'd like to say I really like Wikipedia.

      There are problems with revert wars and pontification, and various biases working their way into the articles. People are aware of these issues and discuss them. They're already improved, and will be resolved.

      There is one subtle problem that will be difficult to fix, and it's common to all other types of encyclopedias as well. Perhaps the concept is a bit more engaing in the case of Wikipedia. The problem is, knowledge does not follow Democratic principles. You can't take a vote and determine absolute truth.

      Gallileo said a lot of things The Church didn't like, so they placed him under house arrest until he died as an old man. But despite his various astronomical beliefs being in the extreme minority, he was right and almost everyone else was wrong.

      It's easy to say that was a long time ago, and we're a lot more enlightened now. In some ways yes, but in many important ways, no. For example:

      After trying for about a decade to convince the global medical community that H. pylori bacteria cause most peptic ulcers, Robin Warren finally drank the bacteria, gave himself a horrible case of ulcers, then cured himself with antibiotics. The medical profession finally paid attention to the science.

      So, the truth is not always well represented by the popular belief.

      But Wikipedia is still a great idea and in practice, it works very well. My thanks to all involved.

      --
      >> My ultraviolent Linux switch video.
    5. Re:How to stop revert wars? by PatientZero · · Score: 3, Insightful
      In one sense, an inconsistent bias requires the reader to think critically about the articles. With a consistent bias, most people simply dismiss the entire site without review or accept it all as true without thinking for themselves or checking facts.

      The funny thing is that your consistent bias is another person's neutrality. There are several people at my office that go on and on about how Fox News is so balanced unlike all the "liberal media" out there. I can see someone thinking the New York Times is unbiased -- though I'd disagree -- but Fox News?

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    6. Re:How to stop revert wars? by JimLane · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wikipedia has its own infoculture as well, considering how many topics there are (understandably) on arcane technical and computer-related topics. Try submitting something arcane on, oh say religion. See how fast it gets dumped into the Votes for Deletion que.

      OK, how about Saint Oswald of Northumbria? Read how he helped to establish the monastery at Lindisfarne (where monks later produced the Lindisfarne Gospels) and about his eventual martyrdom at the hands of Penda, the cruel pagan king: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oswald_of_Northumbria . And, yes, there are also articles about Lindisfarne http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindisfarne, the Lindisfarne Gospels http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindisfarne_Gospels, and even Penda http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penda_of_Mercia.

      To learn something arcane from eastern religion, you can read about the three gunas, a concept developed by the Samkhya branch of Hinduism: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guna. If you're more of a big-picture guy, maybe you'd prefer to start with the general article on Samkhya philosophy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samkhya.

      So, uh, just how arcane do you want?

      AFAICT, none of these articles has ever been proposed for deletion.

  2. obligatory by moosesocks · · Score: 5, Funny

    Wikipedia article on Larry Sanger

    It had to be done ;-)

    --
    -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    1. Re:obligatory by savagedome · · Score: 5, Funny

      You gotta do it true Wiki Style!

      Wikipedia article on Larry Sanger

    2. Re:obligatory by Jon+Chatow · · Score: 4, Funny

      Actually, that's not "Wiki style"; on Wikipedia, we call that "Slashdot style".
      :-)

      --
      James F.
  3. Re:mod article down by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Funny

    mod article down (Score:-1, Troll)
    wikipedia is a bunch of hyporcritical censoring liars. they love to censor certian types of poltical articles that don't match their agenda but they let opinion and bias sneek through if it fits their agenda

    Apparently the same applies to Slashdot mods...

  4. Humans working together? by agraupe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He says, for the whole thing to work, humans have to work together and help one another. Now, I like Wikipedia, and I think it works, but not because people are "helping" as much as they can. It works because there are lots of people with big egos that want to show off their knowledge, and moderators that aren't afraid to ban an entire subnet (any computers from the Calgary Board of Education, where I go to school, are prohibited for making changes; take two guesses why, the first one doesn't count). It still works, but the assumption that it is because people are "helpful" to each other is slightly flawed. I'm sure there are some, but as with most other facets of life, I imagine they are vastly overshadowed.

    1. Re:Humans working together? by MattJakel · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It also works because of the amount of users that don't contribute. Imagine reading an article written by the average American... As a student at a public high school, I get to see how great the average American's grammar and spelling are everyday!

  5. Doomed by PNutts · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "What you have to have faith in is human beings being able to work together."

    Seems that most of our greatest achievements have been by individuals. People working together usually create destruction.

    Wikipedia is doomed. :(

    1. Re: Doomed by Alwin+Henseler · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Seems that most of our greatest achievements have been by individuals.

      Rephrase: many GREAT archievements have been by individuals, but most of our GREATEST archievements have been by groups of people.

      Great: discovering how to make fire, Newton figuring out laws of gravity, Einstein coming up with E=m*c^2, Linus starting Linux project, coming up with Wikipedia concept, etc.

      Greater/greatest: USA and USSR putting men in space, Egyptian pyramids, the Great Wall of China, filling Wikipedia with content, producing 10.000+ package Linux distro, human-like species surviving for millions of years, ...

      Why are these greater? Making a scientific discovery, or coming up with a new idea is great, but somebody else could have done it. If Einstein didn't figure it out, some great mind could have done that later. If it had been forgotten how to make fire, you might re-invent that. But greater/greatest archievements can ONLY be done with groups of people working together. You can't put a man on the moon on your own, even if you would know how to build a rocket. It's just too much work for one person alone. Same with the other examples.

      People working together usually create destruction.

      Yeah, that happens a lot too, unfortunately. Maybe we should work some more on human co-operating skills?

      Wikipedia is doomed

      In that case, the rest of the WWW would be still be left ;-))

  6. WE'RE UNDER ATTACK by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Wow dude, has anybody seen the last article - Yellow Dog Linux? It's become a GNAA nest, I think. To be more on-topic, this dude does have some interesting views on wikipedia, but I think the core of it lies in the article summary - "it's all about having faith in people's ability to work together...". For a cynic like me, I don't have that faith - at least for something like an encyclopedia. There are enough people who like destruction for the sake of destruction, see previous article on Yellow Dof (and 9/11) for an example. What does it cost somebody to revert a wikipedia article and totally trash it? It's a teency-weency bit harder to do the same thing on a FOSS project. As it is, skeptics/cynics like me take all encyclopedias with a pinch of salt, be they online or on dead trees.

    1. Re:WE'RE UNDER ATTACK by Rie+Beam · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You've obviously never worked in a Wikipedia environment. It's amazing that once you've become free from most of the rules, and are given a simply goal, how people will organize themselves and work toward a common goal. Not to say there aren't trolls, but now you have the community, not just the moderators working against them. I'm honestly surprised at how Wikipedia has gotten so many things right - not to say there aren't problems, but overall the project itself is a grand success.

  7. Wikipedia Quality Metric by Gyan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In order to deal with the 'reliability' aspect constantly brought up, Wikipedia's appointed management, could use an audit to ascertain the quality of the project.

    My rough idea is, pick the 10 most popular articles, 10 random articles of moderate-to-high traffic, 10 random articles of low traffic and then do a compare/contrast against 'reputable' references. Then, check those references (and Wikipedia) against primary source references (if they exist, like journals/textbooks, for medical facts..etc). It will provide a good, quantified metric of the quality, acting as a rough indicator of where Wikipedia stands.

  8. Being able to work together by AstroDrabb · · Score: 3, Insightful
    What you have to have faith in is human beings being able to work together.
    Am I the only geek to get goose-bumps over that? My utopia is a world of geeks working together. Maybe one day we will achieve that. I guess we have to kill a lot of non-geeks first ; P

    Maybe all that doom training will be worth something!

    --
    If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
    it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
  9. Don't worry by presidentbeef · · Score: 4, Funny

    If the first Foundation - I mean Wikipedia falls, the second Foundation - I mean Wikipedia - on the other edge of the galaxy shall prevail. Encyclopedia Galactica?

    --
    Everything I need to know about copyrights I learned from Slashdot.
  10. I made a Wikipedia entry!! by rethin · · Score: 4, Funny

    well, sort of.

    I did a search for "revert wars" and came up empty.

    So I created an article (sort of)
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revert_wars

    Lets see if we can't get this puppy fleshed out a little.

    Rethin

  11. could wikipedia use the slashdot philosophy? by deathcloset · · Score: 5, Interesting

    why not have a moderation system like slashdot?

    Require that 5 editors approve of a content addition/change before that modification is applied.

    Track the editor's moderation record. Make negative modding count both against the negative moderator as well as the moderated.

    This way only by getting 5 positive mods in x number of editor views can an addition get approved.

    There certainly has to be a way to handle the vandalism and pettiness. slashdot's moderation system seems to do a great job of handling just that.

    I mean, as an example, cruise slashdot at +5 and you get some good meat. drop to +4 and you've got your side of fries (or potatoes), +3 to eat your vegetables +2 for fiber +1 for garnish and 0&-1 for a dark alley to purge yourself in an anorexic fit.

    Just cruise the first couple posts on this thread and take a gander at what allowing anyone to post anything brings...

    I know there are problems with the slashdot moderation system - but as a whole it's a good system which tends to bring the most relevant and informative posts to the top of the heap. I would venture to say the slashdot moderation system is one of the most effective user-based moderation systems in existence.

    Now, since I'm not familiar (and like to read the contributions of individuals), tell me; how closely does the slasdot moderation system currently relate to the wikipedia moderation system?

    as an afterthought and to browse off topic (further?) since the inception of politics.slashdot.org I have contemplated the idea of something like a debate.slashdot.org

    It's quite a tricky notion to convieve - how could you setup something akin to a formal debate in the form of a web forum? I mean, it seems all the lego pieces are here, robust moderation system, informed parties abounding with great skills at backing claims.

    Would you somehow create opposing teams by using a vote system? how would you determine the representative for the side of the debate?

    mark my words. With slashdot and wikipedia we have only begun to see the possibilities of massive contribution of free thought.

  12. revisionist history? by bcrowell · · Score: 4, Informative
    Interesting that the article completely ignores the failed nupedia project and Jimmy Wales. It makes it sound as if Wikipedia was a unitary project created in whole cloth by Larry Sanger, which really isn't the case.

    Sanger says participants often become embroiled in "revert wars" in which overprotective authors undo the changes others try to make to their articles.
    In my experience, this is not at all what revert wars are about. They're not about pride of authorship, because that's an impossibility on Wikipedia. They're about controversy. You get an article about, say, messianic judaism, or Ronald Reagan, which then becomes a battleground between believers and skeptics.

  13. Might Benefit from a Moderation System by The+Fifth+Man · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Having text subject to a moderation period for hours or maybe a day or two in a discussion area (with some sort of indicator or flag) would be a LOT better than instantaneous posting, IMO.

    I contributed to the entry on Internet Explorer (specifically, removing it). A while back, some editors at Wikipedia (I'm not attributing--I'm sure this time lack of attribution will make them happy) were continually deleting the section on removing Internet Explorer from Windows. The kept changing criteria... First, they wanted the passage on removing IE to say exactly who recommends it. Then, it had to meet Neutral Point of View and attribution criteria. Then, another Wikipedia editor asked what computer security experts recommend IE removal. It finally ended; they deferred and named the three experts in the field.

    Per the article: Nonbias is a difficult ideal to live up to. Indeed, the most common complaint against Wikipedia is that it is unreliable; since anyone can publish or edit any article instantly, theres nothing except the diligence of other contributors to keep favoritism, misinformation, vandalism, or sheer stupidity out of the encyclopedias pages. I'd argue that so-called nonbias is not the problem.

    The problem was that these dedicated editors were not deferring to the actual experts (in this case, me--the guy who has a site on removing Internet Explorer from Windows 2000, and ignoring the creators of XPLite and nLite). If the editors don't like something, all they have to do is claim that it violates the holy grail Neutral Point of View and you'll have to beat them over their heads to get your text into the Wikipedia. Moderation is a lousy way to get at the exact truth, but eventually, it comes to light (seems to here at Slashdot, anyway). No, obviously the truth isn't what everyone thinks, but it would sure help with those editorial battles. An article might have a comment that Hydrogen caused the Hindenberg disaster, and it gets modded +5. Eventually, you can bet the comments pointing out that it was the zeppelin's skin (paint) will also get modded +4 or +5. The key is with the Wiki, with moderation, potential authors wouldn't have to have month-long running debates and editorial beat-downs.

  14. Why Wiki sucks.... by mungtor · · Score: 4, Funny

    think of how dumb the average person is...

    Now realize thay 1/2 the world is even dumber than that.

  15. The right tool for the right task by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Slashdot:
    - once you post it's set in stone
    - everything is moderated by default
    - mods have low power as individuals
    - moderation is recursively cliqueish; moderator approval feeds back into modpoints
    - system designed to force some semblance of signal into a high-noise community
    - unavoidably encourages groupthink and modwhoring

    Wikipedia
    - everything is mutable
    - moderator intervention is rare, the normal way problems are resolved is via discussion and edits
    - moderation is a private club with significant power
    - system assumes most people are "signal" and that "noise" is rare
    - encourages discussion, reason, and NPOV

  16. My thoughts as a Wikipedian. by Combuchan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But Wikipedia's "staff" of volunteers is "better than any full-time staff you could imagine, because there are so many people involved," Sanger says. Any malicious or mistaken entry "is going to be instantly noticed" and corrected.

    Bzzt. Wikipedia has a LOT of articles...430000+ in the English version alone, with varying ranges of popularity, of course. Vandalism that happens on some articles will be corrected immediately, vandalism on others could take days to languish. I've seen insidiously biased and incomplete articles that take far longer than an instant to get fixed.

    What's more troubling is that people think Wikipedia is an end-all of knowledge. I wish it were, I really do. The problem is, a vandal or somebody just flatout misinformed could easily change some obscure date from like 1342 to 1324 and nobody except an expert could possibly notice and correct. From this we can derive a major problem in Wikipedia: The number of bad edits to good editors can be incredibly disproportionate, and everyone else in between won't usually know the difference.

    In a perfect world, we'd seek out that information three times over before using it, and change any wrong edits back, but humans are just naturally lazy and not inquisitive enough when it comes to information on Wikipedia. In some sordid way, Wikipedia really does reflect the sum of all human knowledge. It's just that humans aren't perfect.

    When someone uploads a patch to an opensource project, you have a pretty good idea of the effectiveness of that patch--it'll either do what it says, or it won't, if the new source will even compile. Bugs can be found by the sheer number of people using the software, and they're usually a lot more apparent than an unfact on Wikipedia. No information compiler exists, and it doesn't spit out warnings when you've mispelled somebody's name, transposed a digit in their birthyear, or just die when you've got something completely wrong.

    I think Wikipedia would do well to perhaps remove editing by anonymous users, or perhaps introduce some sort of moderation system like those discussed elsewhere in the thread. The problem with these solutions is that knowledge is very fleeting--sometimes somebody just won't care long enough to create an account before an edit, or they might be a rare holder of some tidbit of knowledge that can't be verified by a moderator. And who's to say the moderator's correct?

    Wikipedia has a vast amount of potential. Their pursuit for freedom in both beer and speech of human knowledge is remarkably admirable, and I consider them one of the best Internet charities around. Regardless of the inherent problems, I will continue to be an editor and support them in other ways as time goes on.

    --sean

    --
    "[T]he single essential element on which all discoveries will be dependent is human freedom." -- Barry Goldwater
  17. Don't let authors block by JavaRob · · Score: 3, Informative

    Another angle would be to allow authors to block edits of their text, but to allow others to put dissenting links in it pointing their own articles.

    I wouldn't do that, because the "author" is not necessarily any more an authority than the dissenters are. And the NPOV thing on Wikipedia is very specific about *not* treating all points of view equally, or letting a very vocal minority make itself seem like an equal player with commonly-accepted ideas.

    At the moment, I can't think of a better way they how they do it -- it's not chaos, because they actually do lock down articles that have become wars, and they do include reference to fringe ideas (but clearly label them as fringe).

    If you haven't read their bit on the neutral POV, it's very mind-opening stuff; there's no need for the chaos, and there should be no "winner" of the edit war.

  18. Moderation Would Require a LOT More Wikipedians by the+pickle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've given this some serious thought since my earlier post, and while I'd love to see every edit moderated in some way, I don't think it's in any way practical, nor do I foresee that it ever will be.

    Let's look at a few statistics, shall we?

    Wikipedia's Wikistats show that for November 2004, there were over three-quarters of a million edits. That's an average of about 25,000 edits every day.

    There are just over 15,000 registered "Wikipedians." Of these, approximately 1,000 have performed at least 100 edits. Let's call these people "active Wikipedians" and assume that these people all have time to moderate on a daily basis and, more importantly, are willing to moderate on a daily basis. That leaves each active Wikipedian with 25 edits each and every day that must be moderated.

    Now, let's look at Wikipedia's growth during 2004. Since January, the number of monthly edits has increased by a factor of just over four. The number of active Wikipedians has increased by a factor of just over three. In one year's time, if these rates hold steady, the daily moderation burden of each active Wikipedian will increase to about 33 edits.

    The number of edits is increasing faster than new Wikipedians are joining, which means this problem is only going to get worse.

    In order for a moderation system to work -- I'm trying to be optimistic here -- Wikipedia would have to implement something that judged the "degree" of each edit. Edits that make large-scale changes -- where, say, more than one percent of the page changes -- would be a top priority for moderation, because it's these edits that have the most potential for destruction. Edits that simply change a character or two, copyediting stuff, wikifying, etc., would be less likely to be specifically harmful, and perhaps could be moderated at random.

    Moderation, like meta-moderation here at Slashdot, could then be used to drive a karma system. The more useful edits a user makes, the higher his/her karma. After a certain point, perhaps that user's edits could be flagged as "low priority" for the moderators, because it's very likely that a user who has made many useful contributions in the past is continuing to do so.

    In short, moderating every edit will never be practical, but moderation could probably be put to good use all the same. Implementation would be a nightmare, though.

    p

  19. Sorry, your criticism is flat-out wrong by JimLane · · Score: 5, Informative

    The current wikipedia state...Is sad. When anybody can change the entire entry without anybody noticing.. the "Douche" entry was insulting some girl with first and last name for about a week or two before it was changed.

    Without a serious review system, I can see it becoming a nest of crap that no one will be able to use.


    I just went through the entire history of the Wikipedia article on Douche. I learned more about douching than I ever wanted to know. (Still, the review is much easier with the new Mediawiki v1.4, implemented in beta just this week. You can go directly from any version of the article to its immediate predecessor or successor, or you can do the same in the "diffs" that display the changed sections and highlight what was changed.) When I review the article, I don't find anything like what you describe.

    The article seems to be a favorite place for the kiddies to insert people's names, but this vandalism gets reverted quickly. The first one ("Oh, and Eric's a douche") lasted all of one minute back in March before it was reverted.

    Here are subsequent corrections reverting such edits, with their lag times showing how long the vandalism stayed up before it was caught:
    one minute
    three minutes
    two minutes
    seven minutes
    one minute
    nine minutes
    one minute

    Now, I'll admit, they got us this week. The vandalism that added someone's name at 2:02 on December 21 wasn't reverted for thirteen hours. I guess we were all at our Winter Solstice rituals. But there is nothing remotely close to "insulting some girl with first and last name for about a week or two before it was changed."

    So, if you had added such a claim to a Wikipedia article, I'd just delete the misinformation, while giving my reasons (as above) in the edit summary or on the article's talk page. If you could back up your assertion, you could restore the passage. If you and I couldn't reach agreement, we'd get other participants involved. Here on Slashdot, with its "serious review system", however, all I can do is post this response.

  20. My experience of revert wars. by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 5, Interesting


    I used to be a massive fan of Wikipedia and a regular contributor in the fields of computer science, programming and military history.

    However as Wikipedia has became more popular it has also became completely overwhelmed with pop-opinion, poor rigour and fact checking. It has become completely bogged down blatant bias and revisionist history, and simply trying to keep on top of this became exhausting.

    At first I assumed this was simple ignorance, and tried to work withing the wikipedia process for resolution, but it was pointless, over time I came to understand that the trouble causers seemed to exhibit the same personality traits as usenet trolls and MOG griefer. The ignore facts, build straw men and resort to personal assaults. However the usual tactic of ignoring them doesnt work because they carry on changing the articles anyway, use revert bots to change articles on mass. Some examples.

    - One contributor who tried to suggest that encapsulation was not a fundemental feature of OO.
    - Another contributor kept removing the word riot from the blood Sunday article.
    - Another contributor kept removing the evidence of JP Jones war crimes.

    These are just some of the many problems I experienced at the hands of revert bots.

    In the end I gave up and left them to their ignorance.

  21. Here's how the funding was really decided. by Jamesday · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Half of the last funding drive target was "pushed through" by me, when I suggested raising it from $25,000 to $50,000.

    My motivations are very simple: I estimate what I think reasonable growth based on past performance will require and project roughly what it will cost to buy the equipment to keep up, then suggest a sufficient target to cover those needs.

    For the quarter now ending that estimate was three database slaves and 15 Apache web servers as the reasonable maximum we'd need based on past growth, with 2/10 more likely. 2/10 was just about sufficient and we've been discussing and I'm preparing the last of the three anticipated orders for the quarter now. Performance suffered for a while because of equipment failures (more than 5 still out of service), delays getting those computers (compatibility issues the vendor sorted out, bits of bureaucracy and timing issues largely). So we're preparing to handle a larger number of failures as well...:)

    For the next quarter I'm looking at something higher. I'm expecting to be in the top 100 sites on the net during the spring quarter, with a fair probability of the top 50. Not at all bad for a place funded solely by donations from well-meaning people who want and like the resource.:)

    The "big" item coming soon is ordering a new master database server to handle the English and Japanese encyclopedias, so we'll have it in test service for two months before switching to it. Followed soon by similar very capable database slaves for them. If anyone knows a place willing to donate 12-40 15K SCSI drives...?:) Or, for that matter, any fairly fast drives, including drive maker refurbs, since everything is RAID. Or anything in the way of quite high end disk systems or high capacity RAM modules, for that matter. It's a fine opportunity for high profile public good PR.

    Japanese is paired with English because Japanese load is falling while English is rising and vice-versa.