Main Page
{{Main Page
|advert=
|blog post=
Celtic Knot provides a stage and a meeting place for contributors to small and minority language Wikipedia’s from all around the world. You can now submit a paper and register for this years conference, which will be held at the National Library of Wales in the Welsh seaside town of Aberystwyth.
Wiki Loves Monuments is the world’s biggest photographic competition and takes place every September. Participants take photos of historic places, including buildings and archaeological sites.
Wiki Loves Monuments encourages photographers around the world to upload photos of heritage monuments to Commons so that they can be used to illustrate Wikipedia. Images from Wiki Loves Monuments in the UK have been seen nearly 14 million times in October.
I am delighted to have become the new chair of Wikimedia UK at today’s AGM. I was initially elected to serve as a trustee in July 2015, and re-elected to serve a further term last year until 2019. Over the last two years I’ve been privileged to be able serve the organisation through both the formal duties of a Trustee and as a volunteer. In addition to my main Board duties, I’ve been a member of the Governance Committee and the Partnership Advisory Board, and have helped organise education conferences.
I really like Magnus Manske’s WikiShootMe tool. It visualises Wikidata items, Commons photos and Wikipedia articles on an OpenStreetMap. Wikidata items are shown as red if they have no photo and green if they do have one. For the past few months, I’ve been spending my lunch hours walking around the area near the Wikimedia UK offices, trying to turn red data points into green ones.
Over the past few weeks, Wikimedia UK has received a large number of press inquiries related to the Guardian’s article ‘Wikipedia bans Daily Mail as ‘unreliable’ source’. Now that the dust has settled on this story a little, we thought it might be helpful to clarify how the community of editors who create Wikipedia and its sister projects came to adopt a policy to generally avoid using references to Daily Mail articles.
Much of the coverage of this editorial decision, both by The Guardian and by other media, referred to Wikipedia at least as often as Wikipedia editors; although The Guardian did add that ‘The move is likely to stop short of prohibiting linking to the Daily Mail’, because as many Wikimedians will be fully aware, one of the Five Pillars of Wikipedia is that ‘Wikipedia has no firm rules’.
The learning curve when you start editing Wikipedia and its sister projects can be steep, so to help you get started, we decided to compile some advice that will help you navigate the complexity of the Wikimedia projects.
Check out the Getting Started page for general advice and information about how Wikipedia works before you start editing. There are a lot of written and visual tutorials as well as links to policies and guidelines used on the site. A quick look at the main editorial policies of Wikipedia, known as the Five Pillars, is also worthwhile.
Blog by Robin Owain, Wikimedia UK Manager
In December 1996 I uploaded around 150 of my published poems on a website, ”Rebel ar y We” (‘Rebel on the Web’), available to all, free of charge. In 2005, after my son’s illness, I changed the title to ”Rhedeg ar Wydr” (‘Running on a Glass Roof’). A few months later a revue was published by the Welsh Books Council in their magazine ”Llais Llyfrau”, which recognised that this was the first time a Welsh book had been placed on the web, the first Welsh e-book.
I urged other writers to publish on the web, rather than through a publisher; the middleman, the censor. The uproar which followed was not nice, especially by one publisher in North wales who saw it as the beginning of the end! “Hundreds of pounds are at stake!” he wrote (”Golwg”, 16 March 2000), and for the next 10 years I was ‘sent to Coventry’ by the media. In an interview on BBC’s Radio Cymru around 2010 a listener phoned in and rudely chastised me by saying, “Don’t speak through your hat! Of course you can’t get a book to move down a phone-line and appear in another place!” And, yes, that was only 6 years ago! How things have changed!
Contributing ‘free information for everybody’ was my battle-cry, and the reason I started editing Wikipedia, with my first edit as User Llywelyn2000 on 7 June 2008, when cy-wiki already had a grand total of 16,000 articles. Today it has 81,400.
After the birth of en-wiki, it took around two years before her Welsh sibling, cy-wiki, appeared (July 2003). That first article was – and yes we are myopic! – ‘Wales’ with ‘List of Welsh people’, ‘Squirrel’, ‘David R. Edwards’ and ‘Owain Gwynedd’ quickly following.
|events=
May
- 01 - "The Convergence of Open: Open Access, Education, Data and Culture" Reproducibility and Open Research seminar, All Souls College, Oxford
- 03 - Webinar for Queens' University, Belfast
- 10 - Graphic Impact Wikipedia Editathon, Glasgow Print Studio, Glasgow.
- 13 - Turkish Culture editathon at Newspeak House, London, to mark the 1 year anniversary of the Wikipedia block in Turkey
- 13 - London meetup
- 15 - SLIC WiR Training session for Librarians in Inverness with user:Sara Thomas (WMUK) and user:Delphine Dallison
- 17 - SLIC WiR Training session for Librarians in Dundee with user:Sara Thomas (WMUK) and user:Delphine Dallison
- 19 - Human Rights Defenders event for Amnesty Scotland, Glasgow On-wiki event page here.
- 20 - Human Rights Defenders event at Amnesty International UK, Shoreditch, London
- 21 - SLIC WiR Training session for Librarians in Glasgow with user:Sara Thomas (WMUK) and user:Delphine Dallison
- 22 - SLIC WiR Local History Editathon in Falkirk with user:Delphine Dallison
- 23 - SLIC WiR Training session for Librarians in Stirling with user:Sara Thomas (WMUK)
- 30 - SLIC WiR Training session for Librarians in Galashiels with user:Sara Thomas (WMUK)
June
- 08 - Processions: a Wikipedia editathon celebrating 100 years of votes for women, Edinburgh
- 10 - London meetup
- 12 - City Hall editathon, London
- 18 - Maynooth University Academia and Wikipedia: Critical Perspectives in Education and Research Conference
July
- 05 - Digital Humanities Summer School 2018, Oxford University Martin Poulter giving a session on Wikidata
- 05-06 - Celtic Knot Conference 2018 at the National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth. International Conference focusing on supporting Celtic & Indigenous Languages