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Archive 5: April 2014
This is an archive of past discussions about User:Onel5969. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | ← | Archive 3 | Archive 4 | Archive 5 | Archive 6 | Archive 7 | → | Archive 10 |
Thank you for your copyedit of the Westchester County article. I understand why you may disapprove of the three segments you removed, especially with their poor wording and lack of citations. Nevertheless, I believe that the information is worthwhile.
The first removed segment, about Westchester Square, is perhaps the only place on Wikipedia that links the neighborhood to the town, and is also an important piece of information about the Town of Westchester, which lacks its own article.
The second segment, about municipalities, isn’t worded as well as it could be, but is straightforward in stating that all area in Westchester is incorporated, whether into a village, town, city, or combination. Westchester towns take up large stretches of land that may not even be inhabited, and therefore have borders more like regions than like municipalities.
The third segment, about development corridors, makes sense once you read through it. It details that municipal development follows corridors, like how cities develop on the US east coast. In Westchester, I can’t speak for all of these areas, although it’s reasonable to agree that most towns are along these major transportation routes. I can speak for my hometown, that Briarcliff Manor has developed around the NY and Putnam Railroad, and meanwhile, the separate development corridor of Route 9 enhanced the development of the distinctly separate community of Scarborough, even though both communities became one municipality in 1906. The two transportation routes led to separate developments within one municipality.
I would suggest that the information is added back. Thanks --? (talk) 15:50, 1 April 2014 (UTC)
Transportation routes have been responsible for the county's development patterns, with city and town growth being most pronounced along these corridors. There are five mostly north/south corridors and three which traverse the county in the east/west direction. The north/south routes are (going from west to east): S. Route 9/Albany Post Rd/Broadway Corridor; the Saw Mill River Parkway Corridor; the Sprain Brook Parkway; the Hutchinson River Parkway; with the most eastern corridor being the I-95/New England Thruway. The east/west corridors are, from south to north: the Cross County Parkway; the Cross Westchester Expressway/I-287; and the U.S. 202 corridor.
The Guild of Copy Editors' Award | ||
Congratulations on your first-place finishes in the total-articles (48) and oldest-articles (38) categories in the GOCE March copyediting drive. Thanks so much for your help! All the best, Miniapolis 19:34, 1 April 2014 (UTC) |
The Most Excellent Order of the Caretaker's Star | |
For exceptional copyediting efforts during the Guild of Copy Editors March 2014 Backlog Elimination Drive, copy editing articles with a combined total of 146,523 words, Onel5969 is presented with this exclusive, brilliant, Most Excellent Order of the Caretaker's Star. Thanks so much for your help! All the best, Miniapolis 19:34, 1 April 2014 (UTC) |
Leaderboard Award: Total Words and 5K Articles—2nd Place | ||
This Leaderboard Barnstar is awarded to Onel5969 for copyediting 100,688 words and 7 5K-word articles during the GOCE March 2014 Backlog Elimination Drive. Congratulations! Miniapolis 19:34, 1 April 2014 (UTC) |
Guild of Copy Editors March 2014 backlog elimination drive wrap-up newsletter
– Your project coordinators: Jonesey95, Baffle gab1978 and Miniapolis. To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list. Newsletter delivered by
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Guild of Copy Editors March 2014 backlog elimination drive wrap-up
Participation: Thanks to all who participated in the drive and helped out behind the scenes. 42 people signed up for this drive and 28 of these completed at least one article. Final results are available here. Progress report: Articles tagged during the target months of December 2012 and January 2013 were reduced from 177 to 33, and the overall backlog was reduced by 13 articles. The total backlog was 2,902 articles at the end of March. On the Requests page during March, 26 copy edit requests were completed, all requests from January 2014 were completed, and the length of the queue was reduced by 11 articles. Blitz!: The April blitz will run from April 13–19, with a focus on the Requests list. Sign up now! – Your drive coordinators: Jonesey95, Baffle gab1978 and Miniapolis To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.
MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 13:57, 2 April 2014 (UTC) |
Hi Onel5969, I've moved your reply to a copy-edit request from the Requests page here to the recipient's talk page; I'm about to remove it for archiving. It can be found here. Cheers, Baffle gab1978 (talk) 19:55, 5 April 2014 (UTC)
I'm sorry if I came off as angry or anything in calling you back to the review, but don't sweat it! I figured you'd either forgotten or weren't sure how to proceed, you'd just seemed to approve the article without moving it, so I wanted to get the review closed is all. Thank you for reviewing it! It's an article well on its way to FA status, and the GA promotion is great for it. Corvoe (speak to me) 10:24, 8 April 2014 (UTC)
Could you please add the GOCE template to the Murder of Joanna Yeates article. So that users knows it has been reviewed by a member of the project. Thanks.--BabbaQ (talk) 17:43, 8 April 2014 (UTC)
Hi, I want to offer my sincere apologies for failing to thank you for the peer review you wrote for Bonnie Tyler. I've since addressed most of the issues you raised - I was so happy that someone actually took the time to add their review after the first nomination failed to get any readers despite my requests. Is it still possible for the article to be nominated for C/E work or not? Thanks again. And again. And again! Bonnietylersave (Liam) (talk) 23:55, 9 April 2014 (UTC)
An article I did a lot of work on, The FP, is currently up for review with no replies thus far. Based on your thoroughness and excellent work ethic for Lone Survivor, I'd be flattered if you'd review that article. If not, I completely understand, and thank you all the same! Corvoe (speak to me) 23:39, 9 April 2014 (UTC)
It's pretty arbitrary. Lots of articles have an "in pop culture" section. Mine was a variation. Will bring back a trimmed version.--Aichik (talk) 01:40, 10 April 2014 (UTC)
Hi Onel5969, I've moved the message you left on the GOCE Requests page here to the appropriate user's talk page here because I'm about to archive it. In future, please leave messages for requesters on their talk page, or if necessary, the Requests page's talk page. The Requests page is frequently archived and whilst it's fine to use it for messages relating to a specific copy-edit request, messages intended for requesters to read after the request is completed shouldn't be left there. It's not a talk page and shouldn't be used as such. Cheers, Baffle gab1978 (talk) 22:03, 13 April 2014 (UTC)
I don't really understand the link to Wikipedia:Trivia. That's talking about something else altogether. But I'll tell you why the description of the model of the British tank isn't trivial:
Principally, anyone looking at the picture might wonder what the device is. A suitable caption explains what it is. I should have thought that that was part of Wikipedia's purpose.
Secondly, the accompanying text describes Swinton's advocacy of the Holt tractor as a base for an armoured fighting vehicle. What it does not explain as well as it might is that Swinton could not persuade anyone in a position of responsibility to take up the idea, and the Holt played no part at all in British tank development. By the time Swinton learned of the activities of the Landships Committee and took charge of it, the prototypes were under construction at Foster's, and any idea of using Holts fell by the wayside. The Holts' contribution was as a means of hauling large artillery pieces and supply wagons. If you read the transcript of Swinton's speech in Stockton, he rather glossed over those facts and did nothing to dispel the idea that the Holt led, as a result of his promptings, directly to the tank. In fact, the French and German tanks of WWI owed far more to Holt than did the British. So the presence of the model tank at the ceremony in Stockton is inappropriate. Was the implied link to the Holt tractor a misunderstanding or a deliberate ploy?
On examining this paragraph more closely, it seems odd that the British Admiralty suddenly makes an appearance without any explanation. If anything is trivial and unnecessary, I should have thought that the mention of Foster's and Tritton is. These bits seem to have been rather parachuted in. Whether the Holt was one of the most important military vehicles of all time is hard to substantiate in this context, since all the links in the paragraph are dead.
I'd be happy to improve this paragraph so that it conveys the historical accuracy set out above, but not if it means encountering the all-too-familiar obstructionism. Perhaps we could seek a consensus over the matter of the caption to the photograph. I understand Wikipedia is very keen on that.
Over to you. It strikes me that anyone so concerned with detail could be expected to be anxious to remove some of the more glaring deficiencies in this section.
Btw, the Gas-Electric tank wasn't built after the War. Hengistmate (talk) 16:26, 16 April 2014 (UTC)
"The article is not about the complexities of the military-industrial complex and the politics behind it. It's about the city of Stockton." I'm quite aware of that. I'm also aware that it's not about British tanks. The passage in question, though, is about Swinton's visit to Stockton. I should have thought that if it's worth including it's worth getting right. It would seem to me that something purporting to be an encyclopaedia would make that a priority.
I share your concern about Wikipedia's well-deserved reputation for unreliability. That is why I occasionally correct articles on a small number of topics about which I happen to have some in-depth knowledge, rather than oversee a host of subjects and happily admit to not knowing a great deal about them. If I might say so, this is a very good demonstration of how that reputation is maintained. What a boon Wikipedia would be if only people who know what they're talking about were allowed to edit it.
Citations can be produced for virtually anything here, however preposterous the assertion might be. That is in the very nature of the project. The problem arises when the cites are demonstrably unreliable (or "wrong") and nobody bothers to check them. I have even been assured, in all seriousness, that it is not Wikipedia's place to assess the reliability of sources. What a basis for an encyclopaedia. There is a difference between a conflicting source and a misinformed one.
A case study: When I pointed out Wikipedia's mistaken assertion that George S. Patton Jr. played a role of one sort or another at the Battle of Cambrai in 1917, I was presented, not entirely politely, with a swathe of citations, all placing him in the vicinity of or even at the head of the British offensive. These could not be gainsaid. The historical fact, however, is that he was not present in any capacity at that battle. The article on Patton now makes no mention of his supposed participation, which is as it should be. But Oh! how those Wikipedians resisted.
You will find the citations you have requested, I'm sure. I could provide several, but I'm not going to, because they are flawed. The trouble is that uncritically quoting a source is not sufficient. Allow me to illustrate the difference in this case with a hypothetical quote: "Swinton thanked Holt for building Britain's tanks." Assuming that that is what Swinton did, then the reporting is correct and the source is reliable and can be cited. Unfortunately, it can be demonstrated beyond question that Holt did not build Britain's tanks. Swinton might have been mistaken. He might have exaggerated in order to ingratiate himself with his host. Or the journalist might have misheard or deliberately misquoted him. Does Wikipedia not reflect that in any way, but instead propagate the erroneous belief that Holt built the tanks? I should have hoped that those who busy themselves with the policing of Wikipedia would feel a greater sense of responsibility. Never mind that the article is about Stockton; this is a piece of misinformation that will be read and, possibly, believed.
Of course Swinton ties into Holt. That's the whole point of my intervention. He visited Holt, in 1918. But it does not fill me with confidence that you talk of Swinton "appearing to have at least played a role in Holt moving to Tanks, which was a big part of the city's economic history." None of that is true. Holt had never heard of Swinton until reports of the British tanks began to reach the USA, and probably not even then. They were not based on his tractors. Holt did not "move to tanks"; he built one prototype, in 1917. It was not mass produced, and tanks played no part in Stockton's economic history. Here we have Wikipedia doing the very thing it ought to be preventing.
Also, in my view, the caption that I suggested meets all the criteria set out in MOS:CAPTIONS (adding info not in the text, drawing in the reader, etc), and I see no requirement in the rules for a citation.
It's probably also worth restating the edit I made earlier; that at the time of his visit Swinton's rank was Colonel. He was made Honorary Major-General in 1919, but was dubbed "General" in 1918 by an overenthusiastic American press.
As I understand it, Wikipedia sets great store by consensus. It is my personal belief that knowledge is preferable, but let's work with what we're given. I propose to set the story out on the article's Talk Page and see what others make of it, assuming that anyone is interested. (Another option is to delete it altogether, since it's an episode of little consequence in this context and is supported by questionable references) But let's see if we can add to the sum of human knowledge and test the theory that Wikipedia exists less to inform the reader than to meet the needs of its "editors," and that the latter put procedure before pragmatism.
"I leave that up to editors who have a more personal interest in the history and current events in those locations." Why not do that on this occasion, then?
Thank you, incidentally, for the advice about the importance of prose being pertinent, well-written, and well sourced. I'll do what I can.
Hengistmate (talk) 06:10, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
Copy Editor's Barnstar | ||
I award you this Copy Editor's Barnstar for insisting on clear, comprehensible, and grammatically correct articles. Thanks for copyediting seven requested articles, with a total of 28,644 words, during the April Guild of Copy Editors blitz! All the best, Miniapolis 22:42, 20 April 2014 (UTC) |
You're welcome - I do a lot of copy-editing; can't stand seeing typos on Wikipedia :) Eugene-elgato (talk) 17:13, 21 April 2014 (UTC)
You mentioned an issue for going up to FA. I was curious, what do you see that should be worked on/changed for an FA? Sorry to keep bugging you, your input was just extremely valuable to me. Corvoe (speak to me) 00:03, 22 April 2014 (UTC)
Guild of Copy Editors April 2014 Blitz wrap-up
Participation: Out of 17 people who signed up for this blitz, eight copy-edited at least one article. Thanks to all who participated! Final results, including barnstars awarded, are available here. Progress report: During the seven-day blitz, we removed 28 articles from the requests queue. Hope to see you at the May drive! Cheers from your GOCE coordinators Jonesey95, Miniapolis and Baffle gab1978. To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list. Newsletter delivered by
MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 00:18, 22 April 2014 (UTC) |
How exactly did you find this edit to be in good faith? Editor was clearly vandalizing, just adding where they are (probably) from. Corvoe (speak to me) 14:02, 22 April 2014 (UTC)
Why do you keep removing my entries? Yes, I've read WP: People multiple times about the notability of persons and the name I've added clearly qualifies. I've indicated a reliable source of this person's notability and relevance to St. Petersburg. The source is the New York Times, mind you, and there are many others equally notable. I see multiple clearly irrelevant entries WITHOUT sources haven't been removed. Please focus your energies on those and leave my legitimate edits alone. You're not the only one who can edit articles. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.185.203.107 (talk) 02:08, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
I think you need to re-read WP:People. It clearly says that one's level of "fame" is neither here nor there, nor is volume of work. NOTABILITY is all that matters. Your profile says you're from New York. How do you, or your editor buddies, know what people are notable in St. Petersburg? I work for the Historical Society. Half the people on this list, your "blue" links (so now someone has to build an article on someone first before they can be referenced?), aren't from and don't even live in St. Petersburg. The other half actually participated in the "7 year old minor film" you mention. How many source links do you want? There are ample major media sources dating back over a decade up to this very year, the New York Times article is but one. The "Mystery Monkey of Tampa Bay" is a notable person but not a local artist who made the only film of significance to ever come out of this area? I find it strange and sad that someone who works for the St. Pete historical society can't add a legitimate entry but some goofball can add some monkey nobody ever heard of. I'll await the deletion of half that list, including every single baseball player who has achieved nothing of significance and don't even live in this town.
Edit - You know, nevermind. I'll build an article for the individual first, then create appropriate references. Then it won't be a "red" link. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.185.203.107 (talk) 04:16, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
Very bored with Wikipedia editor snobbery. You selectively apply rules to prevent people from making contributions so only those in your little club who you allow to play can participate. You clearly didn't understand it because perceived "fame" or volume of work is not a factor, and that's all you keep referencing. NOTABILITY. NOTABILITY. NOTABILITY. I sign with my IP and that's plenty. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.78.215.78 (talk) 18:43, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
Thank you so much for copy editing the article. I really appreciate it. I especially appreciate you going through the comic section. It's the one section that I really did not have a hand in, because I haven't read the comics yet. I did not want to try and clean that up prior to the copyedit because I did not want to spoil anything. I've been following your work on the article since you started, and I really liked the work you were doing. I was curious as to the reason behind removing some quotations, adding the ellipses to others, and then the space to the em-dashes. It was the first time that I've seen that happen in a copy edit before. BIGNOLE (Contact me) 04:01, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
Hi, Onel! I took a look at the message.
I reverted the removal. Rancho Dominguez Preparatory School is in fact a Los Angeles Unified public school. LA Unified released an attendance boundary map for the school. I understand the name may be misleading so I'll make it clear it's a public middle and high school. WhisperToMe (talk) 11:35, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
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