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10 votes
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Ohio just passed the worst energy bill of the 21st century
9 votes -
Heatwave threatens to accelerate ice melt in Greenland
7 votes -
Over two hundred dead reindeer found on Norway's Arctic Svalbard
10 votes -
Advice for starting a Wiki project
I am considering starting a wiki project for an academic niche. I've already started prototyping using Gitit, I've written a bit easy pages to get a feel for the software and am planning to start...
I am considering starting a wiki project for an academic niche. I've already started prototyping using Gitit, I've written a bit easy pages to get a feel for the software and am planning to start working on the most important page that summarises the topic itself, which I believe will help guide me to which pages to create first.
Now, here I'm asking for general advice to a newcomer n00bie wiki admin like me: what to expect, what software, etc. Any advice welcome, but I'll list a few questions below:
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What wiki software? I am liking Gitit, it is nice and easy to set up, and comes with its own server which I run with a systemctl user unit in the background. I tried Oddmuse but couldn't get it to work with a simple server; Ikiwiki setup is too clumsy for my liking (it friggin put stuff on my
$HOMEby default!); I want to avoid PHP stuff in general; I want a simple wiki that serves simple HTML pages. -
How to defend against spam? My plan is to keep it invite-only for as long as I can. IDK how to do that with Gitit yet.
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How to serve it securely and for cheap, once I decide to publish? It probably won't ever grow beyond a few dozens of megabytes in file size.
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How do you go about promoting a wiki?
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What peripheral services (issue tracker, mailing list, IRC/Discord/etc channels) go well with a wiki?
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What tools are available to ensure content quality (no plagiarism, enforce conventions, monitor changes, ...)?
13 votes -
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Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has criticized Finland at a political event in Romania
7 votes -
Subnautica: a world without guns | War Stories
8 votes -
Small problem: An encounter with refugees and the legal system of Greece
7 votes -
Dissecting A Dweet: Ring Weave ~ a 140 byte javascript animation
9 votes -
Study finds positive bias in human languages
4 votes -
Passenger in clown suit prompted mass cruise ship brawl, say witnesses
12 votes -
There's an underground economy selling links from The New York Times, BBC, CNN, and other big news sites
12 votes -
The Hidden Costs of Automated Thinking
5 votes -
Death Stranding | Heartman character spotlight trailer
4 votes -
The origins of anime
3 votes -
Europe’s cities weren’t built for this kind of heat
21 votes -
Cricket is the fastest growing sport in Sweden – Afghan refugees boost player numbers
5 votes -
Overly Attached Girlfriend officially quits YouTube
8 votes -
How a new logo saved the city of Oslo $5 million a year
8 votes -
Seeing yourself (BPD in the media)
6 votes -
How societies turn cruel featuring Sargon of Akkad
12 votes -
Proposed removal of kernel AX.25 support
5 votes -
Monolithic concrete forms associated with brutalist architecture inspired the interiors of Axel Arigato's Copenhagen flagship store
4 votes -
What was the most fulfilling thing you did this month?
As a respite from all the bad news floating around the internet, let's have some wholesome discussion! Whether it's major and minor, what was the best or most fulfilling thing you did this month?
19 votes -
Sauna Day celebrates favourite Finnish pastime – over 1,000 public and private saunas throughout Finland open their doors
7 votes -
The Man Who Built The Retweet: “We Handed A Loaded Weapon To 4-Year-Olds”
12 votes -
These circular ruins at Smeerenburg are all that remain of a 17th-century Arctic whaling outpost
4 votes -
The government’s arguments for restoring the death penalty all fail
5 votes -
USA's World Cup stars return to big crowds – but will it last?
4 votes -
Denmark in favour of coalition presence in Strait of Hormuz
4 votes -
Why the end of smoking is complicated
5 votes -
Iceland's prime minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir talks climate change and gender equality over ice cream
6 votes -
Yabby You and King Tubby - Walls Of Jerusalem (2019)
8 votes -
Any chance we can get a ~space group?
I know that this has been discussed before (I personally participated in some of that), but, to my knowledge, it's been quite a while since it was brought up. Currently, the three groups that seem...
I know that this has been discussed before (I personally participated in some of that), but, to my knowledge, it's been quite a while since it was brought up.
Currently, the three groups that seem to make the most sense for space exploration news are ~tech, ~science, and ~misc. Personally, I perceive ~tech as being best suited for general news about what's going on in the tech industry, more or less "hey, Google released this" or "these researchers are working on graphene batteries". Similarly, I understand ~science as a place for discussing scientific discoveries and "meta" discussion about science as a whole. I think that most would agree with me on those characterizations after looking at those groups when sorted by activity or new.
Space exploration, on the other hand, doesn't really fit in either. It's not exactly ~tech material, and it's also not really the right material for ~science, since much of it isn't about specific new discoveries or studies, etc. If we had an ~engineering, I would say that that would be the correct place for space discussion, but we don't have one.
If you look at what's been happening over the last few months in the realm of space exploration, I think that it's also pretty easy to see that there's enough going on to generate enough content and discussion for a dedicated group. There've been new launches on a weekly or biweekly basis, interesting moves made by different new entrants to the industry, all of the NASA Artemis news, plenty of things from SpaceX, etc.
35 votes -
Classic Doom games vanish, reappear on Xbox One with features missing
13 votes -
1993’s Doom requires a Bethesda account to play on Switch, quickly becomes an internet joke
11 votes -
Not with a Bang, but a Letter: How Violet Evergarden rewrites traditional World War I narratives
3 votes -
SpaceX's Starship prototype aces first untethered hop test
15 votes -
Digital authoritarianism and the threat to global democracy
5 votes -
Suggestion: a method for anonymous appreciation at the user level
One thing I really like about Tildes is the exemplary tags for comments. I love being able to let someone know I thought they had a great post, and I especially like that it's anonymous (though I...
One thing I really like about Tildes is the exemplary tags for comments. I love being able to let someone know I thought they had a great post, and I especially like that it's anonymous (though I realize some people like signing theirs, which I'm fine with too).
One thing I've found myself wanting to be able to do is give someone an exemplary label not for any one individual comment but for their contributions to the community at large. Maybe they're consistently thoughtful and insightful; maybe they go out of their way to post a lot of content for the community; maybe they're contributing code to the platform. It's less that any one particular thing they've done is amazing (though they often have individually great contributions too) and more that they've demonstrated a noteworthy and consistent pattern of good behavior.
As such, I think having something similar to the exemplary tag but applicable to a particular user could be very beneficial. I realize privately PMing a given user can currently accomplish this, but those are not anonymous, and I really like the idea of supporting others without revealing who I am, since I don't want my praise of others to influence their opinion of me. Furthermore, for the community at large, I think there's a benefit to praise of that type coming from "a voice in the crowd" rather than specific identifiable users, as it promotes community goodwill rather than person-to-person cheer.
Of course, with any type of anonymous feedback the thing to consider will be the potential for misuse. Someone could easily target/harass someone using an exemplary user feature by writing a nasty message, but this is also currently possible with exemplary tags and I don't know if it's been a problem? Nevertheless, it's something to consider. Perhaps a built-in report feature should something cross a line?
Furthermore, if such an appreciation mechanism were to be implemented, I would strongly advocate against any sort of publicly visual indicator on the site (like the blue stripe on comments). I think applying differences to that at the user level can create an appearance of user hierarchy, which is undesirable for a variety of reasons. Instead, I feel like it should be invisible to everyone except the recipient--basically an anonymous PM that they can't respond to, letting them know that they're awesome and why. I also think a similar "cooldown" system would benefit it. In fact, I'd probably advocate that it be longer than the one for comment tags.
Thoughts?
13 votes -
All trading and selling of Team Fortress 2 items has been disabled after a bug in the new patch increased the chance of crates containing an "Unusual" item from 1% to 100%
19 votes -
Five myths about global poverty
10 votes -
2019 XXL Freshman Cyphers
DaBaby, Megan Thee Stallion, YK Osiris and Lil Mosey's 2019 XXL Freshman Cypher Blueface, YBN Cordae and Rico Nasty's 2019 XXL Freshman Cypher Roddy Ricch, Comethazine and Tierra Whack's 2019 XXL...
DaBaby, Megan Thee Stallion, YK Osiris and Lil Mosey's 2019 XXL Freshman Cypher
Blueface, YBN Cordae and Rico Nasty's 2019 XXL Freshman Cypher
Roddy Ricch, Comethazine and Tierra Whack's 2019 XXL Freshman Cypher
There's also the freestyles and interviews in this playlist.
6 votes -
Exploring the Sierra On-Line "Super-Junior" computer
4 votes -
No, Lyme disease is not an escaped military bioweapon, despite what conspiracy theorists say
10 votes -
Project Glasswing: Adobe's new transparent display
7 votes -
A mathematician has resolved the Sensitivity Conjecture, a nearly thirty-year-old problem in computer science
24 votes -
Men. Abuse. Trauma.
14 votes -
Dialysis firm cancels $524,600.17 medical bill after journalists investigate
10 votes -
The internet is rotting – let’s embrace it
15 votes