Wikimania'06 Kicks Off Next Week
Vivek writes "Following on the heels of its first international conference, the Wikimedia Foundation is ready to kick off the second Wikimania 2006 International Conference next week (August 4-6) in Cambridge, MA. Last-minute Registration is still open and volunteer positions are available. Among the prominent speakers this year are Jimmy Wales and Lawrence Lessig. Other conference events include hack fests, parties, film festivals, field trips and more!"
Are there so many links on purpose since it's about wiki?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikimania
Wow! Wikimedia has been really busy lately. They just finished celebrating 750 years of American Independence the other day!
I find [ctrl]-A useful when reading excessively linked Wikis. I appreciate the ability to shoot off easily on so many tangents, but it can be challanging to read when every word is a link.
-Rick
"Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
But... Can anyone jump in the middle of their speeches and change a part of what they said?
The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
The above article summary does not cite (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WP:CITE) every single fact stated in a resource outside of Wikipedia and therefore is not verifiable (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WP:VERIFIABILITY).
I have no choice but to file an Aricle-for-deletion entry with the Slashdot police.
Talk about link noise. Excessive linkage nullifies the use of a link as a highlight of key words. What a mess.
and he used to run a cheap porn site. Does anybody else just stop and wondering in amazement sometimes that wikipedia actually made it? In just a few years it's gone from nothing to the most used reference in the world.
A lot of tech guys work on software for internet porn. I was in a meeting once and a discussion about whether a particular solution was scalable was concluded with "Well it worked for Porn, so it should work for this". He made his point.
There is a nice article on Wikipedia in the July 31 "New Yorker" magazine.
It covers fairly concisely and for a non-technical audience many of the things covered here on slashdot and elsewhere.
It does have a couple nice quotes :
And, in response, from Jimmy Wales (Wikipedia) :From Jorge Cauz - the president of the Britannica corporation :