Wikimedia Girl Geek Dinner/Manchester October 2013

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  • Sunday 27th October
  • 11am-5pm, MadLab, Edge Street, Manchester. Please remember the clocks go back on Sunday.
  • Tickets: £3 (including lunch) - book HERE
lunch, and possibly cake, will be provided

Manchester Girl Geeks presents an introduction to editing Wikipedia! Practically everyone uses The Free Encyclopedia to find out about the world - but have you ever tried adding to it? Women are sorely underrepresented in editing and contributing to Wikipedia articles, and we aim to shift the balance.

We'll show you how to take your first steps as a Wikipedia contributor, and can provide more advanced help if you've already dabbled. Bring along your favourite sources, and we can fix things and add to the body of knowledge together. If you're not experienced, trainers will take you through the basics of logging in and editing, as well as give you some ideas of how to contribute.

We'll have some reference sources from local libraries and online sources, but if you have any good reference works, please bring them along. We'll be joined by guests from the national Ada Lovelace Day celebrations, who have also been holding Wikipedia days to edit articles about women in science and make sure they're comprehensive and accurate, and give credit where it's due to female scientists. If you're in need of a focus on which articles to try editing, you're welcome to take this as inspiration and fix up your favourite science hero.

Refreshments and lunch will be provided.

What to bring

  • A laptop/computer, on which to edit; if you don't have one you can bring, please get in touch beforehand and we can sort something out
  • Reference materials on topics you'd like to write about, such as books, papers or journals
  • Also, remember to create a Wikipedia account before attending

The venue will have wi-fi and projectors

Topics


Some notable computer scientists whose articles could be improved:

Some potential articles that we might want to create:

  • w:Christel Hamann - Took out a U.S. patent on a calculating machine in 1903.
  • w:Christiana Newhaus - Patented an Abacus in 1890.
  • w:Elise Harmon - Computer Hardware. Major player in the minaturizing of computers. Career Physicist and Chemist. She devised an entirely new method for creating printed circuitry. A "hot die stamp method of infusing silver conductors on polymeried thermo-plastic and thermo-setting materials."
  • w:Emily C. Duncan - Received two patents for Calculators (1903, 1904). Her calculators allowed people to calculate the interest and remaining terms for loans of various amounts.
  • w:Lydia D. Myers - Patented an Abacus in 1895.
  • w:Margaret Cavanaugh - Programmed Argonne's first scientific computer. (It had about 2 kilobytes of memory)
  • w:Mary E. Winter - Patented an Adding machiene in 1882.

Agenda

If we get enough participants, we would like to split the group into two (we have two rooms available), with people who know how to edit to go straight into creating articles, and the newcomers to have the editing training first.

  • 10am set up for organisers and trainers
  • 11am start - editing training
  • 12:30pm lunch
  • 1-1:30pm, till 5pm - editathon. We will have cake around 4pm.

Trainers

Please sign up if you would like to join the team and provide training at this event.