Book | Events | Journal | Music | Outreach | Projects |
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Purpose
editInspiration for my editorial contributions to the Wikipedia goes to the book: "The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary" by Simon Winchester (0060175966)
User Name
editThis grand experiment called Wikipedia is all about sharing. This is why I use the name "Dutch Treat." See more about the origin of this phrase in the article Going Dutch.
Set of tags to organize my subpages.
To Do
editProjects
edit- WikiData - first edits Dec 2012
- authority control templates with VIAF, LCCN and GND data - started Nov 2012, report issues using Wikipedia:VIAF/errors
- National Design Award
- Ranked 154 with 740 views (24/d) in September 2013 according to WikiProject Graphic Design/Popular Pages - more Sep results: 64 (218/d) Stefan Sagmeister; 103 (74/d) Michael Bierut; 150 (26/d) Katherine McCoy
- Ranked 163 with 809 views in February 2013 - more Feb results: 64 (293/d) Stefan Sagmeister ; 93 (121/d) Michael Bierut ; 159 (30/d) Katherine McCoy
- Ranked 169 with 742 views in March 2013
- Improved format of winners list using as reference the featured list Golden_Eagle_Award_for_Best_Foreign_Language_Film as recognized from Signpost On the Road Again 13 August 2012.
- Winners - Francisco Costa and Isabel Toledo designers | Peter Eisenman architect from Yale | Stefan Sagmeister and John Maeda graphic designers | Dan Kiley | Milton Glaser | Eva Zeisel | Paolo Soleri | Antoine Predock | Charles "Chuck" Harrison | Bill Moggridge | Jane Thompson
Expanding Pages
editExpanding pages on:
- looking at Wikipedia:GLAM/NARA/Today's Document challenge and Wikinews Interview
- adding cat to NARA images at Commons:Commons:National_Archives_and_Records_Administration/Categorize
- Self-Portrait of George Richmond and Portrait of a Woman by Robert Peake the Elder from Yale Center of British Art
- Yale Art Museum: Philippe Mercier (and merge from Philip Mercier) Peter Lely and Frederick Sandys works from British Museum at Diana Kirke, later Countess of Oxford