December 2005

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December 29

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  • The Asian edition of Reader's Digest (http://rdasia.com) has an article about Wikipedia on pages 97 - 100 entitled "The New Know-It-All". Among other topics, it discusses the threat posed to traditional encyclopaedias.

December 22

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  • The Wikipedia:Semi-protection policy code has been installed. Pages can now be protected from edits from IPs and from users whose accounts are less than four days old.

December 20

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  • Wikipedia:Semi-protection policy becomes official but software is not yet implemented.
  • Stewards elections for 2006 from December 20th, 2005 to January 10th, 2006.
  • Nielson/NetRatings reports (PDF) that Wikipedia, with 17,642,000 unique visitors in November 2005 for a 291% year over year growth rate, is the 7th fastest growing "web brand" with at least one million unique visitors.

December 19

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December 14

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  • A special report in the scientific journal Nature [1] has compared Wikipedia's science coverage with that of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. The article is headlined "Internet encyclopaedias go head to head; Jimmy Wales' Wikipedia comes close to Britannica in terms of the accuracy of its science entries, a Nature investigation finds." The study shows that Wikipedia is less accurate than the Britannica, but only by a small margin.

December 13

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  • Wikipedia's daily Alexa rank hit 27 today, probably helped by recent press coverage.

December 11

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December 6

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Our one-day Alexa ranking has hit 30 for the first time ever.

December 5

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Anonymous page creation was disabled on the English Wikipedia on an experimental basis. Talk page creation is not affected. For more details, see Experiment on new pages.

November 2005

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November 26

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Jimbo has announced he will hand-pick new ArbCom candidates rather than have an open election for them, then have the public vote on his selections, with 50% support required to pass. See Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee Elections December 2005/Straw poll.

November 22

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Nielsen/NetRatings announced its list for Top 10 Online News & Information Destinations; Wikipedia is #8. [2] (Wikipedia is the first open citizen-powered site to crack the top ten, says Steve Rubel. [3])

November 1

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  • We have reached 800,000 articles in the English Wikipedia.
  • Wikipedia is now among the Top 40 most popular sites on the web. According to Alexa Internet our three-month averaged rank has hit a new record of 38.

October 2005

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  • The article on Haute couture was panned in the Guardian by Alexandra Shulman, the editor of the British edition of Vogue, who gave it a score of 0/10 [4]. This article is in desperate need of expert attention. Haute couture needs your help! Please help fix its inadequacies, and polish it until it can become a featured article candidate.
  • In a press release on October 20, Answers.com announced a new partnership with the Wikimedia Foundation. Answers.com will launch a Wikipedia Edition of their popular 1-Click Answers software. Advertising revenues from this service will be shared with the Wikimedia Foundation. See Wikipedia:Tools/1-Click Answers.

September 2005

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  • Wikipedia's daily Alexa Internet traffic rank has recovered from its brief drop to a new record of 35, while the weekly traffic rank has entered the top forty for the first time.
  • We have reached 750,000 articles in the English Wikipedia.
  • Although Wikipedia's global traffic has risen substantially [5] in the last week with the addition of new servers, Wikipedia's daily Alexa Internet traffic rank [6] has fallen significantly over the same period, to 47.
  • The first Squid servers in Seoul are now live, and serving traffic to several Asian countries. [7].
  • The new Yahoo!-hosted server farm in Seoul [yaseo] is now in the process of being commissioned by Wikimedia's tireless developer team. [8] When up and running, this will be the Wikimedia Foundation's fourth active server farm, adding to the current server farms in Tampa, Paris, and Amsterdam.
  • Wikipedia's daily Alexa traffic rank reaches #39, breaking into the top 40 for the first time.
  • Across all Wikimedia projects and languages, the largest of which is the English-language Wikipedia, the Wikimedia servers are now serving approximately 200 million requests per day on the busiest day of each week. (source) According to Alexa, 66% of wikipedia.org traffic goes to the English Wikipedia, and, again according to Alexa, traffic for other Wikimedia projects is tiny compared to that for Wikipedia, so if we assume that (say) 95% of all Wikimedia goes to Wikipedia, and 66% of that to the English Wikipedia, that represents 125 million requests per day for the English Wikipedia.
  • Another record-breaking month has just ended. The Wikipedia project gained more than 185,000 new articles in August, over 49,000 of them in English. New records were also broken by a multitude of other language versions, including the German, Italian, Portuguese, Polish, and Chinese Wikipedias, and Swedish became the fifth six-figure Wikipedia project. Statistics will be uploaded here over the weekend, if not before.

August 2005

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The Wikipedia foundation has put out an order for twenty more servers today.

  • The English Wikipedia passes 700,000 articles, around 06:32 UTC.
  • Wikipedia's Alexa traffic rank has reached a new high, with a weekly rating of #44, and a one day hit of 41 last Saturday.
  • Wikipedia:Requests for comment has been split into several subpages by topic area (e.g. "history", "politics" etc). Editors are encouraged to put the subpage(s) on topic areas they are familiar with or interested in on their watchlist, so that they can be kept informed of any upcoming issues and conflicts in that area.
  • Numerous news outlets are quoting a Reuters report that Jimmy Wales has stated that there will be a "freeze" on editing. Jimbo says that statements about methods for achieving the widely-discussed stable "Wikipedia 1.0" were misinterpreted as implying a project-wide lockdown. Wikipedia's open editing will continue for the foreseeable future, and any potential stabilized version would exist alongside the current system. Jimbo was last seen looking for the 'edit this page' link on the Reuters article.
  • I haven't had time to upload the statistics yet, but the figures for July show that the English Wikipedia grew by more than 47,000 articles. This is an all-time record. The Wikipedia project as a whole grew by almost 160,000 articles, also a record.

July 2005

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  • The week of July 31-August 6 has been declared Wikification Week on Wikipedia! Pick an article of interest from one of hundreds available in Category:Articles that need to be wikified, and help us clear out the backlog, wiki wiki (very fast)! No special expertise required.
  • The English wikipedia now has 20 million edits!
  • Including redirects, discussion pages, image description pages, user profile pages, templates, help pages, articles without links to other articles, and pages about Wikipedia, the English wikipedia has 2 million pages!
  • A new Wikiproject has been created: WikiProject help desk. The goal is to bring people who need help with software that relates to Wikipedia and the seasoned computer people who can help them solve their problems together in one spot. There is already an open case: WikiProject help desk/20050702 Dmcdevit The tool that Dmcdevit uses to perform Transwikis has broken since the software upgrade.
  • What a month it's been! The Wikipedia project, both in English and overall, broke all records in June. More than 138,000 new articles were added, over 36,500 of them in English. This breaks even the ancient records, dimly remembered by only a few geriatric Wikipedians, that were set when Rambot briefly took Wikipedia by storm in "dark ages" past.
  • After a couple months of hovering in the 60s and 70s, Wikipedia's one-day Alexa rating reached number 53 in Alexa's rank of traffic to all web sites, a new record.

June 2005

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  • Yahoo! has ordered 23 servers for the Foundation, according to Jimmy Wales on the mailing list this morning.
  • The process of upgrading the Wikipedia site to use MediaWiki 1.5 has begun. This is being done one wiki at a time, and each wiki will be locked whilst it is converted. Amongst other benefits, this process will finally convert the English-language Wikipedia to UTF-8, allowing much better multilingual support.
  • A collaboration between KDE and the Wikimedia Foundation to integrate Wikipedia content and web services into the KDE desktop was made public at Jimbo's keynote speech [9] at the Karlsruhe LinuxTag in Germany.
  • New statistics charts are available, showing how the new Amsterdam cluster is now taking much of the load off the Paris and Florida clusters. Note that because the Amsterdam cluster serves a limited geographical area, its traffic shows a much greater daily variation than that of the Florida cluster. (Chart: Amsterdam cluster data is in green)
  • The Amsterdam cluster is live, and serving users in Europe. (pictures)
  • The new database servers have arrived in the Florida data center
  • The Florida server cluster move has been completed.
  • The main Wikimedia server cluster in Florida will be down for relocation to another building beginning at 0700 UTC (3am US EDT, 0900 CEST). The downtime is not expected to last beyond 2100 UTC (5pm EDT, 2300 CEST). This downtime will affect all Wikimedia projects. [10]
  • Eleven new Wikimedia servers are in the process of being deployed in Amsterdam. When this is live, this will be Wikimedia's third data center, in addition to the Florida and Paris clusters.

May 2005

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  • The 100,000th file is uploaded to the Wikimedia Commons media repository, which includes a vast number of free content images and other media contributed by members of the international Wikipedia community, including:
    • Reproductions of 10,000 public domain paintings from ancient to modern times
    • 7,733 pronunciation files in various languages
    • Hundreds of public domain recordings of classical music
    • A growing collection of videos of historical speeches
  • Wikipedia:Featured list candidates is open for nominations and votes.
  • The English-language Wikipedia hits the meaningless, but pretty-looking milestone of 555,555 articles.

April 2005

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  • A new survey has been created to ask, Should biographical entries in the Wikipedia begin with a prefixed style of formal address? Survey may potentially change the status quo for use of style in a large number of existing biographical pages.
  • After a dip this weekend, Wikipedia's daily Alexa rank surged to 56, with a weekly average of 76.
  • Wikipedia's traffic continues to rise at an unprecedented rate. Alexa's traffic rank for Wikipedia has risen to a weekly average of 77, with a one-day rank of 66. From wondering whether Wikipedia would ever get into the list of top 100 websites, we are now in a situation where breaking into the top 50 is now a realistic prospect.
    • On account of this, Wikipedia's traffic has now outpaced that of Ask Jeeves ([11]) a heavily-advertised commercial search engine. [12]
  • The Wikimedia Foundation and Yahoo! announced today that they have reached an agreement by which Yahoo will provide hosting capacity to Wikimedia. Yahoo will dedicate a significant number of servers in one of its Asian facilities for hosting Wikimedia's free content websites. See the press release and announcement.
  • Traffic continues to increase at an unprecedented rate [13], with a weekly average Alexa ranking of 82 and a daily rank of 77.
  • Wikistats are now available for all Wikimedia projects. More at meta.

March 2005

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  • It appears that the month of March, as well as the year to the end of March, have broken new records for Wikipedia's growth. I will recheck my calculations tomorrow and upload the new statistics on the Wikipedia:Multilingual statistics page, but a preliminary check shows that Wikipedia (in all languages) has gained more than 104,000 new articles in March—the first time we've ever broken into six figures in a single month. (The figure will be slightly higher tomorrow, when I add in today's gains). In the twelve months to the end of March, Wikipedia appears to have gained just over one million new articles—another first.
  • As you may have noticed, Wikipedia is currently having difficulties accepting new edits. If you receive an error, chances are that your edit was saved, but that server problems prevent Wikipedia from showing you the newly-edited page. If you get an error, make sure you have a backup copy of the edit you made, and then try to reload the original article. When getting an error while saving a change the back button will also often take you back to the edit screen containing your modified text.
  • A new survey has been created to assess consensus regarding naming conventions for colleges and universities where the common name can create ambiguities (e.g. "University of Texas" [at Austin] vs. "University of Texas at Dallas"). Survey addresses both the specific case of the "University of Maryland" and a general proposal for amending Wikipedia:Naming Conventions. Such an amendment potentially impacts a large number of existing pages.
  • Surfwax has just announced its LookAhead search term suggestion technology combined with Wikipedia into a new site called WikiWax.
  • The damage caused to the Wikipedia cluster by last week's power outage appears to have been mostly repaired, and Wikipedia performance appears to be back to being fast and reliable.

February 2005

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  • You did it! Thanks to your generosity we exceeded our fund drive goal by 15%. Update: the goal has now been exceeded by 26%: see details.
  • Wikipedia response times remain bumpy, and availability is sometimes intermittent. The Wikimedia systems admins are working hard behind the scenes to restore the server cluster, server by server, while still leaving the site running. More information will be available as things change.
  • Wikipedia is back in service, although work continues to attempt to undo the remaining damage caused by the crash. A summary of events can be found at m:February 2005 server crash.
  • A major power failure at the colocation centre where Wikipedia's main servers are hosted crashes all the Wikipedia servers. Several database servers were corrupted. Fortunately, one server had intact data, and, after replaying transaction logs, all or almost all data was salvaged from the crash. After many hours of total downtime, Wikipedia was brought up in read-only mode.
  • A major vote on Talk:Gdansk/Vote aims to resolve the multi-year conflict about the naming of Gdansk/Danzig and other locations with a Polish/German history. This vote affects dozens of pages, please vote! Voting ends at 0:00 UTC on Friday, March 4.
  • Ten new servers have arrived; 6 planned as squid servers, 4 planned as Apache servers. It will take some time for them before they can put into full service, as they need to be installed, networked, configured and tested first.

January 2005

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  • Wikipedia is now running Mediawiki 1.4beta4+, according to Tim Starling.
  • The French squid servers, Wikimedia's first servers outside the United States, have begun serving non-English content to some European countries. The servers are hosted just outside Paris by Lost Oasis.
  • Wikipedia's Alexa one-day traffic rank rises to a record #130, with a weekly traffic rank of #143.
  • Slashdot is running a story [16] about Larry Sanger's criticism of wikipedia for its anti-elitism and possibility of a fork due to that. In Sanger's article [17] slashdot cites, he identifies two problems: (1) lack of public perception of credibility, particularly in areas of detail. (2) the dominance of difficult people, trolls, and their enablers. A reaction from Clay Shirky can be found at: [18].