End of 2007

Posted by Angela Beesley on January 31, 2008 (Australia, Events, Interviews, Milestones, Wiki, Wikia)

Thinking of writing a blog post about the Wikimedia Commons picture of the year contest reminded me I had an unpublished draft post about 2007. Like my end of 2006 post, here’s a summary of what happened last year.

January

Psychonaut's ferret in a hat. Photo by Chris McKenna. Released under the GFDL and cc-by-sa
Snow in the garden late 2006/early 2007. Photo by Tim the first time he saw snow

I celebrated New Year at my sister’s house in England, with my family and Tim.

Essjay joined Wikia’s community team on January 7th. Tim and I went to a London Wikipedia meetup on the 9th.

February

Angela, Terry, Jimmy, Gil - on the party bus

I went to San Mateo for the first Wikia staff meeting in the new office. It was my first time in San Francisco. The number of people there was amazing - 36 compared to 6 the previous February. Of everything that happened there, the thing that sticks most in my mind is the “party bus” - something I just can’t sum up on my blog. Quite incredible. Drunk staff, getting more drunk while on a bus that has a disco ball. Cigars on the no-smoking bus, people climbing out of the sunroof, wheelchairs, weird people in the bar, falling off a giant chair… and there’s another one of these coming up in March!

Fountain in Birmingham

I got back to England and took Tim to Birmingham for valentine’s day. Perhaps not the most romantic city in the world, but I have fond memories of it since I went to uni there.

Wikia was listed as one of CNN’s 25 startups to watch.

A cute article in The Age mentions that Tim and I met through Wikipedia.

March

Wikia and Wikipedia had more press attention than usual this month.

The photo of me at my parent's house that appeared in The Times (not available under a free license)

The Times had an interview with me, claiming my “world has certainly been changed by Wikipedia.” Very true. I also spoke on a radio station in Melbourne on TV in a BBC World interview later in month. A lot of the press was sadly about Essjay, who resigned from Wikia on March 4th.

Datrio, then a board member of Wikimedia Poland, moved from Wikia’s tech staff to community staff, and provided a vital connection between the two. Catherine Munro, who joined Wikipedia a week before I did, joined Wikia on March 15th, at least in part to replace Essjay.

April

Tim and I with the Girl Geeks

In April, I took part in a panel at the British Association for American Studies conference in Leicester.

I attended a Wiki Wednesday and spoke at a Girl Geek dinner in London.

May

I went to Canada for the first time in May for the RecentChangesCamp in Montreal, en route to New York for Wikia’s product summit.

Shun Fukuzawa joined Wikia’s as our first representative in Japan. Jabber founder Jeremie Miller joined Wikia to work on Wikia Search.

June

In June I visited Wikia’s Polish office for the first time.

July

Grand Hotel, Taipei
I attended another Wiki Wednesday in London and then went to Taipei for Wikimania.

August

I celebrated my 30th birthday in Taipei. I have vague memories of Wikia staff dancing on tables.


September

A quick visit to the Wikia offices in Poland and San Mateo and then finally back in Australia.

Eastern Gray Kangaroo - click to zoom

I saw wild kangaroos for the first time. There were around 100 of them in the Morisset Hospital grounds!

I spoke at Web Directions South in Sydney and attended Webjam.

October

In October, Tim went to Florida and I went to Melbourne. I spoke at a Digital Culture Forum at ACMI.

I packed up our old flat in Melbourne so we could finally move to Sydney; something we’d been planning to do since July 2006. We moved to Hornsby Heights. There are fast trains from Hornsby into the center of Sydney, and it’s far enough out of the city that we can afford to rent a two-bedroom house rather than a flat. There is an amazing variety of wildlife here as you can see from the photos on my wiki.

November

Wiki-Wiki bus (a wiki you can't edit). Photo by zordroyd. cc-by-sa

Back in Sydney, I spoke at the International Association of Business Communicators.

I’ve not blogged much this year, but my wiki is slightly more active. In November, I added the ‘Wikis you can’t edit‘ page (it’s not what you think) and started to collect photos of things I see in the yard. So far the page includes wallabies, snakes, spiders, kookaburras, parrots, cuckoos, skinks, blue-tongued lizards, peahens, cockatoos, leeches, crickets, and other insects. They’re not great photos but an interesting reminder of what I’ve seen since moving to Sydney.

DecemberCarpet Python, Queensland

I spoke at the Online Social Networking & Business Collaboration World in Sydney.

Tim and I flew to Queensland to spend Christmas with his family. It’s the first time I’ve been away without my laptop. I had to amuse myself by watching the carpet python on the rafters outside instead!

After Christmas, we went to the Woodford Folk Festival. It rained constantly and was extremely muddy. In the 20 minutes the sun came out, I managed to get sunburnt and bitten by a green ant. Despite that, it was very enjoyable, and a much needed break, since it was the first time since Wikia started that I’ve actually taken an entire week off!

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Five wikis - what’s the connection?

Posted by Angela Beesley on June 20, 2007 (Wiki, Wikia, Wikimedia)

Wikia logos
What do the Wikia sites on events, POV editorials, photography, the Polish RPG Wolsung, and the Fallout series of games have in common?

Add a guess in the comments.

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Blogger’s Code of Conduct at Wikia

Posted by Angela Beesley on April 9, 2007 (Wiki, Wikia)

Inspired by Tim O’Reilly’s call for a Blogger’s Code of Conduct, we’ve started a draft Code of Conduct on Wikia’s Blogging Wiki. Brad Stone reported on this in the New York Times today in “A Call for Manners in the World of Nasty Blogs“:

“The conversational free-for-all on the Internet known as the blogosphere can be a prickly and unpleasant place. Now, a few high-profile figures in high-tech are proposing a blogger code of conduct to clean up the quality of online discourse.”

“Last week, Tim O’Reilly, a conference promoter and book publisher who is credited with coining the term Web 2.0, began working with Jimmy Wales, creator of the communal online encyclopedia Wikipedia, to create a set of guidelines to shape online discussion and debate.”

The draft is a starting point which may evolve into more than one set of guidelines, with logos that bloggers can use to display which set they aim to follow (like the new buttons developed for the Definition of Free Cultural Works) .

I encourage you to read the draft and join the discussion on the wiki or mailing list. Like all Wikia sites, the Code of Conduct is open to editing and to creation of alternative versions, so please get involved and help us to reach a consensus on what should be included in these guidelines and how we might define “civil behavior” in the blogosphere.

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Happy Easter

Posted by Angela Beesley on April 8, 2007 (Events, Wiki, Wikia)

Happy Easter!

Here are a few Easter Wikia pages I found testing out Wikia’s new cross-wiki search tool.

Find out about Easter on the Christianity wiki, religion wiki, or the Churches of Rome wiki. The calendars wiki describes the controversies around the date of Easter. Easter in literature and fiction can be found on the Muppet wiki or on the Harry Turtledove’s Literature wiki. Wikiality and Uncyclopedia have Easter parodies. Easter Bunnies can be found in many of Wikia’s gaming and comics sites, including Penny Arcade, Creatures, Runescape, and Gaia Online. Find out about Easter eggs in Star Wars or discover a different type of Easter egg on the Easter eggs wiki.

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Why openness matters and new wiki magazines

Posted by Angela Beesley on March 13, 2007 (Wiki, Wikia)

Gil Penchina, Wikia’s CEO, was part of a panel on Open Knowledge vs. Controlled Knowledge at SXSW today. Via the bloggers who were there, I found out that Gil explained that Wikia suffers fewer problems with vandalism than the Wired wiki experiments because Wikia has always been, and will always be, open.

Arvind Grover, an editor of the School Computing Wikia, has a detailed post about the panel.

According to Dawn Foster, Gil explained that Wired suffered the “principal for a day” mentality where those visiting the wiki wanted to mess with the control of the content, as opposed to a wiki which was built up by a community that feels ownership for their content.

Laura Porto’s report on the panel says that Hemai Parthasarathy, Managing Editor of the Public Library of Science, said that the fear with openness “is that the bad comments will rise to the top”. This is something Wikia is aiming to solve with our new our new wiki magazines. The home page of each magazine displays content that the visitors and contributors have highly rated, which can be useful for ensuring the best content is highlighted. Of course such ratings are gameable but we’ll be developing tools to allow the community to magage that.

This ties in nicely with our launch of four new wiki magazines today. Joining our magazines on sports, places, politics, and entertainment, are tunes.wikia, cars.wikia, health.wikia, and gaming.wikia.

Compare gaming.wikia with our gameinfo wiki which is a traditional knowledge-base style site. Whilst gameinfo remains the best place to find a game guide on The Battle for Wesnoth, the new magazine lets you find out about new features in Fable 2 and provides a place where you can write opinion articles like “World of Warcraft is Addictively Frustrating!” as well as a place to share the latest news, opinion, gossip, and events related to gaming.

Also at SXSW: Evan Prodromou on the commercialization of wikis.

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wiki.com returns

Posted by Angela Beesley on March 12, 2007 (Wiki, Wikia)

new wiki.com logo
The $3 million domain Wiki.com is back. It closed down in January and the wikis hosted there were rescued by Wikia, migrated to Mindtouch’s new wik.is site, or lost forever.

The new wiki.com features a Google Co-op powered search on its home page and, less prominently, a link to a page about starting a wiki at Central Desktop. The site still seems to be owned by Dynamo.

Update: 14 March: It’s gone again! A password is now needed to access the site, but wik.is which includes the active wikis from the old wiki.com has relaunched.

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Commercialization of wikis

Posted by Angela Beesley on March 12, 2007 (Wiki, Wikia)

If Liz Henry’s notes are anything to go by, Evan Prodromou gave an interesting talk at SXSW this weekend on the commercialization of wikis. He apparently said that the wikisphere needs a healthy ecology. I’m guessing the implication was that the commercialization of wikis could provide that.

Evan defined four types of wiki businesses and I was so happy to see Wikia in with wikiHow and Wikitravel and not the sites people usually think of as Wikia’s competitors. Unlike simply providing a hosting service, Wikia focuses on particular topics and on “managing the wiki itself and developing its culture and community”.

The four types Evan defines are service provider, content hosting, consulting, and content development. I actually Wikia has elements of all of these, and more… there are surely more than four types.  I’ve started a page on my wiki to list some more.

Here’s Evan advice for commercial wiki companies (which could actually apply to anything and anyone):

  1. Have a noble purpose.
  2. Demonstrate value.
  3. Be transparent.
  4. Extract value where you provide value.
  5. Set boundaries.
  6. Be personally involved.
  7. Run with the right crowd.

I must remember never to use the word “crowdsourcing“. Here’s one of Evan’s slides: Crowdsourcing = suckers

See types of wiki businesses to help define these.

5 Comments

Essjay

Posted by Angela Beesley on March 4, 2007 (Wiki, Wikia, Wikipedia)

According to Read/Write Web’s recent poll, “55% Of people regularly or always fake their web identity”.

I’ll miss you, Ryan. :(

90% of Wikia readers are lurkers

Posted by Angela Beesley on January 25, 2007 (Community, Wiki, Wikia)

I’ve just put the results of a small scale study Wikia carried out last year on the wiki. The study aimed to find out how many of our page views were from logged in users compared to people who were not logged in. We were testing out Jakob Nielsen’s statement that “90% of users are lurkers who never contribute“.

Jacob was exactly right. Sampling 1% of 3.5 million page views across all Wikia sites on one day in November 2006 showed that 90% of readers were not logged in.

There were a couple of interesting exceptions amongst our most popular wikis. At Star Wars Fanon, 70% of page views were from logged in users. The Spanking Art Wikia was at the other end of scale, where logged in users account for only 1% of page views. Presumably those interested in Star Wars Fanon are already involved in a Star Wars community and they’re visiting the wiki because they want to both read and write this fan-fiction. People looking for pictures of spanking, on the other hand, probably aren’t there because they want to join a community. Both are popular wikis in terms of page views, but the Star Wars Fanon one is much more successful in terms of what Wikia is trying to do, which is build wiki-based communities, not simply attract uninvolved visitors. It’s a very noticeable difference to Wikia’s community team since Star Wars Fanon is a demanding wiki that often needs our attention, whereas we rarely hear from any users of the Spanking Art wiki despite its popularity in terms of pure traffic numbers.

I’m hoping that by publishing the stats, we’ll encourage the communities to think about how they can get people to feel more involved with their wiki and to decrease the “participation inequality” that Jakob Nielsen talks about. Ways that he suggests to do that are making it easier to contribute, making participation a side effect, letting users build their contributions by modifying existing templates rather than creating complete entities, rewarding participants for contributing, and promoting quality contributors. Now to figure out how to apply these ideas to 2000 very different wikis…

6 Comments

Wiki.com closing down? Wikia offers to help

Posted by Angela Beesley on January 17, 2007 (Wiki, Wikia)

Digg this

Wikia is offering to host wiki.com communities at no charge and to provide support for users who wish to transition away from wiki.com.

A user of wiki.com (not wikia.com) has said in a comment at TechCrunch that he has received an email from John Gotts saying that all wikis on wiki.com will be removed this week. Though two different people have written to Wikia saying the same thing, I’ve been unable to confirm whether this is true. In case it is, Wikia is offering all wiki.com users a new home at Wikia.

See our new wiki at rescued.wikia.com for options, details on how Wikia is different from wiki.com and information for wiki.com users on how to move to Wikia.

If you are a user of wiki.com, we would love to help you find a new home. Visit “moving to Wikia”.

Update: Mindtouch have confirmed that Wiki.com will shut down within a week but the content of these sites will be made available on a new domain in future. See the Message from Mindtouch on the rescued wiki.

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