End of 2008

Posted by Angela Beesley on December 29, 2008 (Australia, Events, Milestones)

Now that I have a personal blog as well as this one, I wondered about moving my “end of year” post there, but now it’s the 3rd, it seems traditional to have it here too, so I’m cross-posting. For previous years, see end of 2006 and end of 2007.

January

Tim and I started the year at Woodford festival, camping in a rented non-waterproof tent in the rain!

February

For Valentines day, we had dinner at Green Palace, a vegetarian Thai restaurant in Newtown.
On the 18th, my grandad died at the age of 88 years.

March

I had planned to be at Wikia’s offices in San Mateo for two weeks in March. Pop’s funeral was scheduled the same time. So, after a week in California, I did a day trip to England and got back to the US on Tuesday for the rest of the week’s meetings.

Back in Sydney, Tim proposed to me on the 22nd, the day before Easter.

April

Tim and I were back in England at the start of April as I’d been invited to give a keynote at the JISC conference in Birmingham. I also gave a short talk at The Webby 5 & People’s Voice Voting party in London and we celebrated our engagement with family and friends in England.

We went back to Australia for Tim’s family reunion in Bellingen.

May

We chose our wedding cake this month. After withdrawing my previous visa application for “de-facto spouse”, I started health checks for a new application for a “prospective marriage” visa.

June

In June, Tim and I flew off in different directions. I spent a few days in Korea for the International Conference on Information Culture, and Tim went to San Francisco for a staff meeting.

Back in Australia, we had our 2nd engagement party – this time a barbecue with Tim’s family.

I also bought my wedding dress this month.

July

In July we went to Egypt for Wikimedia’s annual conference, Wikimania. We spent a few days as tourists in Cairo before getting a bus to Alexandria for the conference. Unfortunately I contracted what was probably E. coli from a dodgy salad at the Novotel at Cairo airport and spend most of the time in Alexandria extremely ill. We headed home via Abu Dhabi where we stopped for one night.

August

For the past few years, my birthday has been during Wikimania, but as that was early this year, I was able to properly celebrate and we has dinner at Rise, a Japanese restaurant in Sydney.

September

In September, we headed to New Zealand for a few days so that my visa could be granted (which had to happen out of the country). We flew into Christchurch because it was by far the cheapest flight from Sydney, and then went to the embassy in Auckland where my visa was approved.

Back in Australia we attended Tim’s 10 year school reunion.

October

Just a month to go before the wedding, but instead of working on that, Tim and I went to San Francisco. It was the first time we’d been there together! I spent the week at Wikia’s new office in San Francisco and Tim was just around the corner for more Wikimedia staff meetings.

November

We got back to Sydney just in time for Wiki Wednesday which I spoke at. A few days later my family arrived in Australia for the first time. We managed to fit in some touristy thing alongside making last minute plans for the wedding on the 23rd.

And finally a chance to relax! We had a wonderful honeymoon on Hamilton Island, part of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. Cruising, sailing, snorkelling, great food, and lots of relaxing!

December

Of course I made up for it in December by spending a busy month catching up before celebrating Christmas with Tim’s family in Bilgola.

My plans for next year include speaking at Linux Conference in Tasmania, attending Wikimania in Buenos Aires, making the final transition to Australia (my parents are still looking after all my junk and receiving lots of post for me!), buying a house, and doing all I can to make Wikia profitable for the first time!

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The unofficial wiki for Change.gov

Posted by Angela Beesley on December 16, 2008 (Politics, Wiki, Wikia)

Launched on Wikia this week is a new wiki to provide a 3rd party versioning system for Obama’s transition site, change.gov. The site was created by Silona Bonewald and Brian Gannon of the League of Technical Voters in response to many suggestions that this needed to happen, especially since it was noticed that part of the policy section of the site had disappeared without explanation.

One of the many benefits of the decision to release change.gov under a free license is that it doesn’t matter that the site itself is not yet version controlled since anyone can reuse that content to provide an independent versioning system. Having a third party do the versioning is more trustworthy than versioning on the site itself as it’s so easy, with MediaWiki at least, to secretly remove revisions (a feature known as “oversight” on Wikipedia) and to secretly add revisions. Whilst it would be great if they would use a wiki for the site, that alone would not provide enough transparency to prevent unwanted sections disappearing again.

You can get involved by visiting the wiki at change.wikia.com or by subscribing to the mailing list.

Related posts:

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Tim’s new blog

Posted by Angela Beesley on December 16, 2008 (Wiki)

I’m pleased to announce that my husband now has a blog. After years of telling Tim he ought to have one, he finally decided that our new VPS should probably be used for more than my own 2 blogs and 3 wikis! Please visit tstarling.com for his first post, on secure web uploads. He’ll be writing about his work for Wikimedia and about web software development in general.

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Searching for wiki

Posted by Angela Beesley on December 14, 2008 (Wiki, Wikia, Wikipedia)

It was nice to see “wiki” as the 5th fastest rising search term here in Australia in Google’s 2008 zeitgeist which was published this week.

Wiki was also amongst the top 10 rising search terms in The Netherlands (5th), New Zealand (5th), Switzerland (6th), Italy (8th), Sweden (8th), Finland (9th), and Singapore (9th). The home page lists wiki as the 10th fastest rising for the UK as well, but the world page does not.

The only place where Wiki was within the top 10 most popular, rather than fastest rising, was Singapore. However, Wikipedia appears on the most popular list for a few countries, including Switzerland (4th), Austria (6th), Hong Kong (6th), Finland (7th), and Germany (7th).

For Russia, википедия (meaning Wikipedia) was the 3rd fastest rising. I didn’t recognise any other translations of wiki or Wikipedia on the lists (although I’m a bit surprised I would recognise википедия!)

In theory, it would be possible to extract similar data for Wikia Search. The metrics section contains info on the number of times each term was searched for and the trends section lets you compare multiple terms. Like the rest of Wikia Search, this data is available under a free license, making it possible for anyone to reuse the data to create their own zeitgeist. For example, the graph below shows the number of daily searches for the word “wiki” on Wikia Search.

Wikia Search trend for

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