Lapsus Linguae

I joined Wikipedia on October 23, 2005, after reading (over a period of several months) probably hundreds of articles and then eventually editing a bunch without creating an account.

Joined 23 October 2005
Saturday
4
May
Information
Name: Craig
Joined: October 23, 2005
Location: Third rock past Sol
Gender: Male
Sex: Yes please
Age: Better side of 40
Contact: User talk
What it means: "Slip of the tongue"
Language?: Latin
Thank-you: You're welcome

Interesting Links
Wiki News: Wiki Signpost
Spelling, etc.: British/American English
Page statistics: Histories
Edit count: Statistics
Contributions: My edits

Someone suggested I create an account, so I did.


Biases

News Flash: I have some.

However, if you find bias in anything I have written, then I have failed in that particular piece of writing. If you point it out to me politely, I will respond politely, and we can work together to improve the article.

I am not going to list all (or any) of my possible areas of bias here. Everybody is biased on some subject to one extent or another, and it's usually on subjects that interest them -- and many, many things interest me. Speaking for myself, the topics that interest me the most are the topics where you will find me doing something more than just correcting the occasional spelling or formatting error, but I think that probably goes for most people.


Things I'm Learning

Although I was using Wiki as a reference source for months, and tweaked a couple of articles here and there (usually nothing more than correcting a spelling mistake) before a flurry of activity prompted someone to suggest I actually join, now that I have joined and have to take some measure of responsibility for what I do, I am more likely to stop and ask myself, "Is what I am about to do the best course of action?" Sometimes it is, and sometimes, believe it or not, I learn something. Here are some things I am learning:

  • Some editors have an agenda.
  • If you go to a page on Wikipedia such as ETA and then you click on the link there to go to the Eta page (note the same spelling but different capitalisation), and then you click your browser's back button, you will go back two pages instead of one, and then you'll go forward two pages instead of one if you click your forward button. The intervening page just kinda disappears. Happens to me with the latest versions of both Firefox and MSIE on Windows XP, but it doesn't happen on a Mac. (Apparently this browser bug has been fixed in the upcoming version 1.5 release of Firefox.)
  • Link spammers will also delete legitimate external links in an effort to hide the addition of their commercial links.
  • After avoiding figuring out how to deal with vandals beyond simply reverting their edits over and over, this is what I've figured out so far:
  1. Revert: First, do revert their edits.
  2. Warn: Then post a note on the user's talk page. What do you post though, especially if you're not an administrator and so you can't authoritatively threaten blocking? Well, you use an existing warning template. You don't need to think up anything or let your annoyance show in wording you choose; just pick the appropriate template, add it to the user's talk page and sign it. Signing it is important, I believe, so that others who come along later (possibly to add more warnings) can see that a real user has taken the time to warn the vandal. And, of course, the warning itself is important too; besides the fact that the vandal might not actually realise he/she is a vandal (usually unlikely, but possible) and so might modify his/her behaviour as a result of the warning, it's important because the various policies state that a user must be warned before eventually being blocked by an administrator. Your posting warnings allows an administrator to realise that this requirement has been fulfilled and so he/she can go ahead and block the user if that is the appropriate course of action.
    • So, for example, to post the "test3" warning ("Please stop. If you continue to vandalize pages, you will be blocked from editing Wiki English. -->") on a user's talk page and sign it, all you enter into the editing box is: Please stop. If you continue to [[Wikipedia:Vandalism template link|vandalize]] pages, you will be [[Wikipedia:Blocking policy|blocked]] from editing Wiki English. --> --~~~~. That's it! No agonising over how to word the warning to be firm but fair, as it's already done for you.
  3. Report: Eventually vandals should be reported if they persist. There seem to be at least two places to report vandals, so I'm not that clear on which one you should use. I do note that the warning templates on each page are different, with the templates on the second page discussed below referring to a particular page that the vandal has vandalised. Here's my best guess:
  • How to do nested and mixed ordered and unordered lists using wiki mark-up! (See above.)
  • More to be added as I learn it.

If you feel that any of the conclusions I have drawn above are incorrect, please feel free to let me know. Thanks.


Cool Stuff on this Page

Anything on this page that looks remotely cool I have brazenly stolen from other cool user pages on Wikipedia:

  • The design of the information column on the right is from Hall Monitor.
  • The date and time in the "calendar page" in the top, right-hand corner are from Serhiodudnic, with modifications by me to make it work in MSIE.
  • And I occasionally use templates I find to inflate the stuff in my Babel box. As you can see, I like to collect them!

Thanks everyone!


Vandals

Hey, it took only four days for the first vandal to hit my user page:

  1. 2005:10:27:14:10 UTC :: 209.250.165.122 :: Talk :: Contributions :: IP owner :: IP location :: Reverted by: Deanos
  2. 2005:10:27:14:12 UTC :: 209.250.165.122 :: Talk :: Contributions :: IP owner :: IP location :: Reverted by: Deanos

Thanks to those of you who have reverted vandalism on my pages.

Picture of the Day

The Nazca lines are a group of geoglyphs made in the soil of the Nazca Desert in southern Peru. They were created in two major phases – the Paracas phase (from 400  to 200 BC) and the Nazca phase (from 200 BC to 500 AD). The combined length of all the lines is more than 1,300 km (800 mi), and the group covers an area of about 50 km2 (19 sq mi). Most lines run straight across the landscape, but there are also figurative designs of animals and plants. Scholars differ in interpreting the purpose of the designs, but in general, they ascribe religious significance to them. The lines were designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1994. This is an aerial view of the geoglyph known as the "monkey", one of the most well-known in the Nazca lines.Photograph credit: Diego Delso


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