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> The World and Wikipedia - Andrew Dalby
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sappho
post Sun 1st November 2009, 9:13pm
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Did anyone read this book yet?
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Peter Damian
post Mon 2nd November 2009, 4:44pm
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Some interesting material in his user space here

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Andrew_D...d_and_Wikipedia

where he mentions the Law incident.
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A Horse With No Name
post Mon 2nd November 2009, 4:56pm
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QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Mon 2nd November 2009, 11:44am) *

Some interesting material in his user space here

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Andrew_D...d_and_Wikipedia

where he mentions the Law incident.


Law is not in the book, but ChildofMidnight and his weirdly funny food obsessions are.

This is a riot, considering who gets into the book: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Andrew_D...ned_in_the_book

I especially like that Keeper76 is in the book. What has he ever done except complain about how boring it is to be an admin?
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grievous
post Fri 6th November 2009, 7:59pm
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QUOTE(A Horse With No Name @ Mon 2nd November 2009, 11:56am) *


This is a riot, considering who gets into the book: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Andrew_D...ned_in_the_book



Cast of characters, or the usual suspects?

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EricBarbour
post Fri 6th November 2009, 8:38pm
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QUOTE(grievous @ Fri 6th November 2009, 11:59am) *
Cast of characters, or the usual suspects?

That's part of why that book is such a joke.

He does not mention Jayjg at all, and the Israel-Palestine editwars rate a few paragraphs (pp. 182-183).

He gives Mantanmoreland only the briefest mention (p. 183).

The editwarring that involved Barack Obama and Sarah Palin articles got plenty of play (pp. 181-182, 209-213), yet the long, ongoing and extremely nasty Armenian-Azeri editwar got only about one page (pp. 170-71).

There's plenty about the Essjay mess, but Poetlister got a short dismissal, and there's not a peep about FT2 or Carolyn Doran.

He even talked about the JHK vs. H. Jonat editwar, which was in late 2001 and which very few people even remembered.

Why doesn't he mention recent (major) AN/I pests like Ottava Rima or Jehochman or Will Beback? Where's JoshuaZ?

And there's a lot of talk scattered everywhere about the French Wikipedia, which I guarantee is of virtually no interest to any en-wiki users, especially on WR.

In short, this is not a book. It's a blog smeared onto dead trees.

This post has been edited by EricBarbour: Fri 6th November 2009, 8:40pm
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A Horse With No Name
post Fri 6th November 2009, 9:29pm
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QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Fri 6th November 2009, 3:38pm) *

QUOTE(grievous @ Fri 6th November 2009, 11:59am) *
Cast of characters, or the usual suspects?

That's part of why that book is such a joke.


Some of the people on the list seem like peculiar choices to write about: J.delanoy, Johnbod, Keeper76, Aleta, Kelapstick, Kevin, Kingturtle and Pickles4u (who?). blink.gif

Eric, how did those characters get cited? And why are they there?
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Andrew Dalby
post Sat 7th November 2009, 5:33pm
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QUOTE(A Horse With No Name @ Fri 6th November 2009, 10:29pm) *

QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Fri 6th November 2009, 3:38pm) *

QUOTE(grievous @ Fri 6th November 2009, 11:59am) *
Cast of characters, or the usual suspects?

That's part of why that book is such a joke.


Some of the people on the list seem like peculiar choices to write about: J.delanoy, Johnbod, Keeper76, Aleta, Kelapstick, Kevin, Kingturtle and Pickles4u (who?). blink.gif

Eric, how did those characters get cited? And why are they there?


I'll answer that one ahead of Eric. The book's real aim is to make non-Wikipedians think about how this resource, used by them every day, gets to be the way it is. All the 220 users in the index of usernames are in there as examples. They did something, good or bad, to an article whose history I want the reader to follow: created it, improved it, categorised it, vandalised it, unprotected it, added irrelevances to it, talked endlessly about it, etc.

I decided at the outset that when I discussed any Wikipedia contribution I should attribute it to its author. The book would have been written faster if I hadn't chosen to do that, but it would certainly have failed to make Wikipedia come alive to non-Wikipedians. (It may still have failed, of course!)

I never interacted with any of these 220 users before they went into the book. And yet ... I have to admit ... the choice isn't mathematically random. Most of the names are of people who made some contribution (whatever it is, good or bad) more than once: they typify an aspect of the site, or an aspect of their own work on the site. Their name passed in front of my eyes two or three times during my research, and I said to myself: go back, use that first example (where the hell was it?), it'll link in here and it gives me another (virtual) personality.

QUOTE(the fieryangel @ Sat 7th November 2009, 6:05pm) *


Do you mention those who face personal attacks, harassment, public verbal abuse and worse because of their efforts in criticizing Wikipedia?

For that matter, is Wikipedia Review (where the Essjay scandal started), Hivemind, Wikipedia Review and other criticism sites even mentioned in your book?

If they're not given significant coverage, I'd hardly call that an "objective" treatment....


Tell me who you mean and I might tell you whether they are in. Here's the first mention of Wikipedia Review. This comes in a survey of criticism sites:

QUOTE
"Wikipedia Review is a forum populated by Wikipedia editors, whose attitudes range from fairly happy to extremely disgruntled. Like all forums you aren't involved in, the Review is penetratingly boring; which must be why I scan it and, as you'll see, cite it."

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the fieryangel
post Sat 7th November 2009, 11:47pm
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QUOTE(Andrew Dalby @ Sat 7th November 2009, 6:33pm) *

Tell me who you mean and I might tell you whether they are in. Here's the first mention of Wikipedia Review. This comes in a survey of criticism sites:


If you don't understand what I'm saying, then you haven't done your homework.

Obviously, this book is for koolaid drinkers only....

QUOTE(Andrew Dalby @ Sat 7th November 2009, 7:37pm) *

And of course the Review is mentioned at the crucial moment in the Essjay story:

QUOTE
EssJay was so good, all round, that the people over at Wikipedia Review were beginning to wonder whether he was a committee; and Daniel Brandt, in August 2006, ruminated that ‘it’s possible that he has made up all of his biographical details. He’s too busy on Wikipedia to be a full-time professor.’



...actually, I don't ever believe that anybody here ever qualified "EssJay" as being "good". I remember other descriptive words being used at the time.

However, you can read that monumental thread here. That was probably one of the major tipping points in the history of Wikipedia, and the history of how it played out is all here.

I think that you're cutting way too much out of the picture. Of course, that's exactly what you were intending on doing, wasn't it?
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Andrew Dalby
post Sun 8th November 2009, 2:35pm
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QUOTE(the fieryangel @ Sun 8th November 2009, 12:47am) *


QUOTE
EssJay was so good, all round, that the people over at Wikipedia Review were beginning to wonder whether he was a committee; and Daniel Brandt, in August 2006, ruminated that ‘it’s possible that he has made up all of his biographical details. He’s too busy on Wikipedia to be a full-time professor.’


I think that you're cutting way too much out of the picture.


Er ... you've seen a two-sentence selection. How do you know what I've cut out?

This post has been edited by Andrew Dalby: Sun 8th November 2009, 2:35pm
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the fieryangel
post Sun 8th November 2009, 2:51pm
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QUOTE(Andrew Dalby @ Sun 8th November 2009, 3:35pm) *

QUOTE(the fieryangel @ Sun 8th November 2009, 12:47am) *


QUOTE
EssJay was so good, all round, that the people over at Wikipedia Review were beginning to wonder whether he was a committee; and Daniel Brandt, in August 2006, ruminated that ‘it’s possible that he has made up all of his biographical details. He’s too busy on Wikipedia to be a full-time professor.’


I think that you're cutting way too much out of the picture.


Er ... you've seen a two-sentence selection. How do you know what I've cut out?


You were the one who selected these two sentences to illustrate your point. If there is more information, then you may add that.

However, if this is how you're presenting Daniel Brandt's discussion of EssJay on Wikipedia Review (which could almost be worked into a book itself, considering the amount of text he wrote about that situation), then you're leaving quite a bit of information out of your account. You can go here and read that thread, which you should have done before you wrote your book.
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Andrew Dalby
post Sun 8th November 2009, 3:32pm
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QUOTE(the fieryangel @ Sun 8th November 2009, 3:51pm) *

You were the one who selected these two sentences to illustrate your point. If there is more information, then you may add that ... You can go here and read that thread, which you should have done before you wrote your book.


If you want more, Angel, you'll have to buy the book, or at least demand it from your library. You'll find it differs very strongly from the book you're imagining. Yes, "penetratingly boring" though Wikipedia Review may be, I read the thread. The whole thread. Every word. End to end. And quoted it. And acknowledged it.


QUOTE(Moulton @ Sun 8th November 2009, 4:23pm) *

There is a Taoist axiom: Think about Right and Wrong, and one immediately falls into Error.


At last! A Wikipedia Review post without a hidden meaning!
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Milton Roe
post Sun 8th November 2009, 6:20pm
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QUOTE(Andrew Dalby @ Sun 8th November 2009, 8:32am) *

QUOTE(Moulton @ Sun 8th November 2009, 4:23pm) *

There is a Taoist axiom: Think about Right and Wrong, and one immediately falls into Error.

At last! A Wikipedia Review post without a hidden meaning!

That's because it's a koan without any clear meaning. Taoists certainly think about right and wrong. If they don't use these explicit labels, it still counts.

QUOTE(Andrew Dalby @ Sun 8th November 2009, 7:48am) *

QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Sat 7th November 2009, 10:31pm) *

QUOTE(Andrew Dalby @ Sat 7th November 2009, 3:43pm) *

QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Sat 7th November 2009, 8:58pm) *
Wikipedia doesn't have to be the drama-factory that it is. It's the drama-whores and bullies there that make it so. And the vandals and POV-pushers. Some editors fit none of these categories.


I name many such editors, of course. It's a sad fact that I don't name all of them, not even the best of them. But, after all, I don't aim to corner the market. Why not write that book yourself? In preparation, why not start a thread on Wikipedia Review praising good, peaceful, constructive, undramatic editors?


Such a thread as you suggest would be drivel. Enjoy your brave new world that has such people in it.


Back to the drawing board, Milton.

You're reading Glassbead instead of me. I think such stuff is useful in context, as a contrast to BAD editing and administration on WP. And I still don't know why you didn't name Kintetsubuffalo, who shares more co-edited articles with you than anybody else I can find on your list.

Not so, you say? Give me another editor you've worked more closely with, or edited more article in conjunction with.

And I'll check it. tongue.gif
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Andrew Dalby
post Sun 8th November 2009, 7:21pm
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QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Sun 8th November 2009, 7:20pm) *

And I still don't know why you didn't name Kintetsubuffalo, who shares more co-edited articles with you than anybody else I can find on your list. Not so, you say? Give me another editor you've worked more closely with, or edited more article in conjunction with.


Milton, you're almost obsessed, it seems, with this question about a different book, one that I haven't written. ''The World and Wikipedia'' is not a memoir of happy work on Wikipedia. It isn't a celebration of good Wikipedia editors. You write that book, or I'll write it -- fine, just find me a publisher and a good contract -- but this book isn't it.

As Wikipedia undermines and destroys other sources of reference -- I give evidence of how this is happening, more and more rapidly -- I want non-Wikipedians to ask themselves whether they care, and what's to be done. Is Wikipedia really the best we can expect? How bad is that? Can we somehow make it better? Or will it just get inexorably worse? I'm not the only one concerned about these questions: this forum is concerned about them too, if I'm not mistaken.

OK, back to Kintetsubuffalo. I've interacted with KB and I agree with all you say about his work. Actually you exaggerate the extent to which we've interacted: since I joined Wikipedia, no one has commissioned me to write a book on Burma, and that means, perforce, that I have written less on that subject on Wikipedia than I expected. My personal work on Wikipedia nearly always reflects the other work I'm doing: I use Wikipedia (and nowadays the Latin Wikipedia) as a notepad, gathering information and links that I will want, or may soon want, in writing books. The article on Scott, which you cited, was just one of those: KB started it at a moment when I was just ready to add some stuff to it. A nice coincidence, although not such a big deal as you seem to suggest. You could equally name Agne27, who wanted me to write more about wine -- and I will, I will, as soon as it fits with all the other things I have to do! I could name others with whom I've interacted (look at Imladjov, who did so much for articles on Byzantium before he was driven off by trolling) and many others whose contributions are wholly positive and admirable. But, if you check these names, you won't be finding things I should have mentioned in this book. You're talking about a book you want, not the book I've written.
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Peter Damian
post Sun 8th November 2009, 7:57pm
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QUOTE(Andrew Dalby @ Sun 8th November 2009, 7:21pm) *

As Wikipedia undermines and destroys other sources of reference -- I give evidence of how this is happening, more and more rapidly -- I want non-Wikipedians to ask themselves whether they care, and what's to be done. Is Wikipedia really the best we can expect? How bad is that? Can we somehow make it better? Or will it just get inexorably worse? I'm not the only one concerned about these questions: this forum is concerned about them too, if I'm not mistaken.


Now you're talking. How is Wikipedia actually destroying other sources of reference?. On 'how bad is that' I opened another thread with a question for you. I have serious concerns not just about the content of the existing Wikipedia but about the structural problems that skew its point of view towards academically marginal points of view. But interested in your view.

If your book really does cover this sort of concern, I will get it.

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Andrew Dalby
post Sun 8th November 2009, 8:29pm
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QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Sun 8th November 2009, 8:57pm) *

QUOTE(Andrew Dalby @ Sun 8th November 2009, 7:21pm) *

As Wikipedia undermines and destroys other sources of reference -- I give evidence of how this is happening, more and more rapidly -- I want non-Wikipedians to ask themselves whether they care, and what's to be done. Is Wikipedia really the best we can expect? How bad is that? Can we somehow make it better? Or will it just get inexorably worse? I'm not the only one concerned about these questions: this forum is concerned about them too, if I'm not mistaken.


Now you're talking. How is Wikipedia actually destroying other sources of reference?. On 'how bad is that' I opened another thread with a question for you. I have serious concerns not just about the content of the existing Wikipedia but about the structural problems that skew its point of view towards academically marginal points of view. But interested in your view.

If your book really does cover this sort of concern, I will get it.


Now you're talking! Evidence not just from Britain and USA but from Europe too: the surprising number of encyclopedias, in several languages, that have announced they won't be publishing any more. German, Dutch, Norwegian, French, others. They still exist, yes; they still have websites, mostly free; you can buy them on DVD for practically nothing. Their business models no longer sustain professional revision.

It's not disastrous this year or next year: most people can get by with a five-year-old edition of an encyclopedia (which is why the annual Britannicas of the 1960s killed their own market without any help from Wikipedia). It's disastrous in the long run. Once those teams of specialist editors have dispersed, they won't be reassembled.

Yes, I just noticed that other thread (I'm not supposed to be doing this, I'm supposed to be writing a book proposal this evening) and have made a brief comment while considering further.
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A Horse With No Name
post Sun 8th November 2009, 8:58pm
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QUOTE(Andrew Dalby @ Sun 8th November 2009, 3:29pm) *

Now you're talking! Evidence not just from Britain and USA but from Europe too: the surprising number of encyclopedias, in several languages, that have announced they won't be publishing any more. German, Dutch, Norwegian, French, others. They still exist, yes; they still have websites, mostly free; you can buy them on DVD for practically nothing. Their business models no longer sustain professional revision.


But is that directly related to Mr. Wales' magical web site or the state of book publishing, which has been in a decline (particularly in the US) for a number of years?

Wikipedia might be a reflection of the so-called "dumbing down" of society, but I have not seen any evidence that reference publishing has lost one cent due its presence.
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post Sun 8th November 2009, 9:53pm
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QUOTE(A Horse With No Name @ Sun 8th November 2009, 2:58pm) *
Wikipedia might be a reflection of the so-called "dumbing down" of society, but I have not seen any evidence that reference publishing has lost one cent due its presence.

Other than the fact that smaller and less-successful entities have gone out of business in recent years? It may be that the survivors of the shakeout caused by WP (such as Britannica) are aided by that too, but ultimately they're in the same sort of trouble as the others. Moreover, it's not so much the traditional-reference-work publishers themselves that we should be concerned about, but rather the professional editors who staff them. The publishing companies will do whatever they can to keep their profit margins intact as long as they can survive, and that usually means layoffs, pay reductions, and a variety of other cost-cutting measures that would reduce bottom-line impact, almost up to the point of complete dissolution.

Anyway, for good or ill, I'd say Mr. Dalby is in the right place - I myself have been going on about this issue for over three years:
http://wikipediareview.com/index.php?showt...408&#entry16408
QUOTE(Somey @ Tue 24th October 2006, 12:11am) *
This is why people like me say you can't put the general public, i.e., just anybody in charge of a major collaborative knowledge-gathering project which, if allowed to continue, could ultimately destroy traditional encyclopedias, dictionaries, and other professionally-produced publications, not to mention undermining traditional standards in academia. That would be a tragedy, and what's even sadder is that most people probably won't realize what a tragedy it is until it's too late, and all of the quality alternatives to unregulated (not to mention plagiarized) content are gone.
http://wikipediareview.com/index.php?act=S...osts&hl=&st=100
QUOTE
Microsoft vs. Linux is a misplaced analogy. Wikipedia is more like "dumping" in the sense of international commerce. You know what dumping is - countries with low standards of living use cheap labor as a means of producing low-quality goods at prices too low for higher-quality manufacturers to compete with, and when their competitors in more affluent societies go out of business, that's when they start raising their prices. Only those laborers keep getting paid the same paltry amount, don't they? And now the people in the affluent societies are worse off too. Great!
And also this:
http://wikipediareview.com/index.php?showt...527&#entry47527
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A Horse With No Name
post Sun 8th November 2009, 10:46pm
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QUOTE(Somey @ Sun 8th November 2009, 4:53pm) *

QUOTE(A Horse With No Name @ Sun 8th November 2009, 2:58pm) *
Wikipedia might be a reflection of the so-called "dumbing down" of society, but I have not seen any evidence that reference publishing has lost one cent due its presence.

Other than the fact that smaller and less-successful entities have gone out of business in recent years? It may be that the survivors of the shakeout caused by WP (such as Britannica) are aided by that too, but ultimately they're in the same sort of trouble as the others. Moreover, it's not so much the traditional-reference-work publishers themselves that we should be concerned about, but rather the professional editors who staff them. The publishing companies will do whatever they can to keep their profit margins intact as long as they can survive, and that usually means layoffs, pay reductions, and a variety of other cost-cutting measures that would reduce bottom-line impact, almost up to the point of complete dissolution.


The book publishing industry (at least in the US) has been a mess for years. The Internet has not helped, of course, but many of the problems facing the publishers have been self-induced and were in place long before WP showed up.





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Andrew Dalby
post Mon 9th November 2009, 1:52pm
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QUOTE(A Horse With No Name @ Sun 8th November 2009, 11:46pm) *

QUOTE(Somey @ Sun 8th November 2009, 4:53pm) *

QUOTE(A Horse With No Name @ Sun 8th November 2009, 2:58pm) *
Wikipedia might be a reflection of the so-called "dumbing down" of society, but I have not seen any evidence that reference publishing has lost one cent due its presence.

Other than the fact that smaller and less-successful entities have gone out of business in recent years? It may be that the survivors of the shakeout caused by WP (such as Britannica) are aided by that too, but ultimately they're in the same sort of trouble as the others. Moreover, it's not so much the traditional-reference-work publishers themselves that we should be concerned about, but rather the professional editors who staff them. The publishing companies will do whatever they can to keep their profit margins intact as long as they can survive, and that usually means layoffs, pay reductions, and a variety of other cost-cutting measures that would reduce bottom-line impact, almost up to the point of complete dissolution.


The book publishing industry (at least in the US) has been a mess for years. The Internet has not helped, of course, but many of the problems facing the publishers have been self-induced and were in place long before WP showed up.


True, but -- up to now -- general book publishing has continued and numbers of new books have increased year on year. It's the encyclopedia market that seems threatened; certainly destabilised by Encarta, and maybe succumbing to Wikipedia. Where now is Encyclopedia Americana? Britannica's still going; it hasn't collapsed, but it's struggling. I'd love to be proved wrong on this.
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Posts in this topic
sappho   The World and Wikipedia - Andrew Dalby   Sun 1st November 2009, 9:13pm
Cedric   Did anyone read this book yet? The fact that ...   Mon 2nd November 2009, 4:25pm
Peter Damian   Note also that Dalby has had a Wikipedia account...   Mon 2nd November 2009, 4:33pm
GlassBeadGame   Did anyone read this book yet? The fact that ...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 9:24pm
Cedric   [quote name='Cedric' post='202548' date='Mon 2nd ...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 11:34pm
tarantino   [quote name='GlassBeadGame' post='202804' date='T...   Wed 4th November 2009, 3:43am
Milton Roe   [quote name='Cedric' post='202830' date='Tue 3rd ...   Wed 4th November 2009, 4:06am
A Horse With No Name   I was planning to purchase a copy. It appears to ...   Mon 2nd November 2009, 4:29pm
thekohser   Law is not in the book, but ChildofMidnight and h...   Mon 2nd November 2009, 5:13pm
Jon Awbrey   No mention of User:Wikipedia Review or User:Theko...   Fri 6th November 2009, 8:30pm
EricBarbour   Some of the people on the list seem like peculiar ...   Sat 7th November 2009, 9:53am
A Horse With No Name   I could answer you with my own question: Why are ...   Sat 7th November 2009, 12:09pm
Happy drinker   I could answer you with my own question: Why are ...   Sat 7th November 2009, 2:44pm
gomi   I could answer you with my own question: Why are t...   Sat 7th November 2009, 11:48pm
Andrew Dalby   And of course the Review is mentioned at the cruci...   Sat 7th November 2009, 6:37pm
Milton Roe   [quote name='A Horse With No Name' post='203240' ...   Sat 7th November 2009, 7:58pm
Jon Awbrey   [i]sinophile [size=7]ewwwww ¤ yuck ¤ :sick:   Sat 7th November 2009, 8:10pm
Milton Roe   [quote name='Milton Roe' post='203372' date='Sat ...   Sat 7th November 2009, 8:31pm
Jon Awbrey   [quote name='Milton Roe' post='203372' date='Sat...   Sat 7th November 2009, 8:36pm
Andrew Dalby   If your editor choices are meant to be illustrati...   Sat 7th November 2009, 8:43pm
Jon Awbrey   In preparation, why not start a thread on Wikiped...   Sat 7th November 2009, 9:00pm
Milton Roe   [quote name='Milton Roe' post='203372' date='Sat ...   Sat 7th November 2009, 9:03pm
GlassBeadGame   If your editor choices are meant to be illustrat...   Sat 7th November 2009, 9:31pm
Andrew Dalby   [quote name='Andrew Dalby' post='203380' date='Sa...   Sun 8th November 2009, 2:48pm
Cedric   [quote name='Milton Roe' post='203372' date='Sat ...   Sat 7th November 2009, 9:39pm
EricBarbour   The book's real aim is to make non-Wikipedians...   Mon 9th November 2009, 4:21am
Malleus   [quote name='Andrew Dalby' post='203355' date='Sa...   Mon 9th November 2009, 4:43am
Cock-up-over-conspiracy   ... but apart from that it was OK? And, more to th...   Mon 9th November 2009, 3:13pm
Andrew Dalby   Now that I've gotten that out of the way .......   Mon 9th November 2009, 1:41pm
Andrew Dalby   There's quite a bit of spluttering in your bo...   Tue 10th November 2009, 1:47pm
the fieryangel   If you want more, Angel, you'll have to buy t...   Sun 8th November 2009, 3:41pm
Andrew Dalby   If Wikipedia Review is so boring, then what are yo...   Sun 8th November 2009, 4:03pm
the fieryangel   If Wikipedia Review is so boring, then what are y...   Sun 8th November 2009, 4:23pm
GlassBeadGame   [quote name='Andrew Dalby' post='203512' date='Su...   Sun 8th November 2009, 6:51pm
Andrew Dalby   [quote name='Andrew Dalby' post='203561' date='Su...   Sun 8th November 2009, 9:45pm
Somey   Wikipedia might be a reflection of the so-called ...   Sun 8th November 2009, 9:53pm
A Horse With No Name   True, but -- up to now -- general book publishing...   Mon 9th November 2009, 2:01pm
SB_Johnny   Welcome to WR, sappho. This your book, perchance?   Mon 2nd November 2009, 5:58pm
sappho   Actually it's not my book; I just happened to ...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 10:39am
Cedric   Actually it's not my book; I just happened to...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 1:20pm
A Horse With No Name   Funny, Dalby only mentions Keeper76 for closing a...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 4:50pm
Limey   I'm rather skeptical of a book only held in ei...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 3:16pm
Cedric   Having now read Slim Shanky's full review, eve...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 4:31pm
Peter Damian   Having now read Slim Shanky's full review, ev...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 4:43pm
CharlotteWebb   [quote name='Cedric' post='202750' date='Tue 3rd ...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 5:07pm
Cedric   [quote name='Cedric' post='202750' date='Tue 3rd...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 6:43pm
carbuncle   Having now read Slim Shanky's full review, ev...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 7:13pm
Somey   It was subtle, but did I detect a hint of self-ser...   Tue 3rd November 2009, 8:49pm
thekohser   Shankbone needs a proofreader:   Tue 3rd November 2009, 4:39pm
sappho   I am rather sorry to have bothered you all - my in...   Wed 4th November 2009, 3:02pm
carbuncle   I am rather sorry to have bothered you all - my i...   Wed 4th November 2009, 3:35pm
Cedric   I am rather sorry to have bothered you all - my i...   Wed 4th November 2009, 6:25pm
A Horse With No Name   Smaller publishing houses run on rather thin margi...   Wed 4th November 2009, 7:16pm
Somey   So it's not a good idea to get an expert to wr...   Thu 5th November 2009, 11:04pm
Peter Damian   So it's not a good idea to get an expert to wr...   Fri 6th November 2009, 8:19am
Peter Damian   So it's not a good idea to get an expert to w...   Fri 6th November 2009, 1:11pm
gomi   here in the Tar Pit.]   Fri 6th November 2009, 6:53pm
EricBarbour   Once again: I have Dalby's book. It appears to...   Fri 6th November 2009, 7:44pm
Cedric   Once again: I have Dalby's book. It appears t...   Fri 6th November 2009, 8:20pm
Andrew Dalby   I thought I'd look in ... The fact that ...   Sat 7th November 2009, 4:33pm
the fieryangel   On this you're very wrong. I don't say th...   Sat 7th November 2009, 5:05pm
Cedric   I thought I'd look in ... [quote name='Cedri...   Sat 7th November 2009, 7:00pm
Andrew Dalby   You may want to call your publisher-- it would a...   Sat 7th November 2009, 7:50pm
Peter Damian   I'm puzzled too. I haven't yet explored t...   Sat 7th November 2009, 9:45pm
thekohser   On this you're very wrong. I don't say th...   Sat 7th November 2009, 10:03pm
Peter Damian   Hello Andrew. I am intrigued to learn that there ...   Sat 7th November 2009, 6:48pm
Jon Awbrey   As long as you're Reviewing The Situation, Mis...   Sat 7th November 2009, 7:36pm
Jon Awbrey   Oh good, another n00b to splain it all to from scr...   Sat 7th November 2009, 9:12pm
Moulton   Wikipedia is such a corrupting influence on so man...   Sun 8th November 2009, 3:16pm
Jon Awbrey   [quote name='Jon Awbrey' post='203384' date='Sat ...   Sun 8th November 2009, 3:26pm
Andrew Dalby   [quote name='Andrew Dalby' post='203349' date='Sa...   Sun 8th November 2009, 3:18pm
Moulton   There is a Taoist axiom: Think about Right and Wr...   Sun 8th November 2009, 3:23pm
Jon Awbrey   Okay, I think I've read enough. Like a trew b...   Sun 8th November 2009, 10:22pm
EricBarbour   Yeah, sure. (urp)   Mon 9th November 2009, 10:12am
GlassBeadGame   I was curious just how this drivel got published. ...   Mon 9th November 2009, 2:13pm
thekohser   I was curious just how this drivel got published....   Mon 9th November 2009, 5:50pm
GlassBeadGame   [quote name='GlassBeadGame' post='203685' date='M...   Mon 9th November 2009, 6:07pm
A Horse With No Name   As someone who did book PR for many years, I am cu...   Mon 9th November 2009, 6:00pm
Somey   Now, c'mon guys, it hardly seems necessary to ...   Mon 9th November 2009, 6:16pm
GlassBeadGame   Now, c'mon guys, it hardly seems necessary to...   Mon 9th November 2009, 6:29pm
Andrew Dalby   If it is a legitimate publishing business, let him...   Tue 10th November 2009, 1:33pm
GlassBeadGame   If it is a legitimate publishing business, let hi...   Tue 10th November 2009, 2:15pm
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