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36c3 preroll music
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Herald: So now we present our next[br]speaker, who is Andre, and he will talk
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about some cool tools related to the[br]Wikimedia stuff that you, as, maybe,
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Wikimedia users could use and do cool[br]stuff with it. So let's have some applause
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for Andre, please.
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Andre: Batterien? Oh, it works, right?[br]Perfect. Sorry for that. Thanks for
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coming. I'm Andre. I work for Wikimedia. I[br]was even wondering whether I should put
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the logo here, because this actually has[br]nothing to do with the Wikimedia
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Foundation itself. So this is all about[br]volunteer work, volunteer software,
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because it's always a mix between several[br]entities like Wikimedia Deutschland,
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Wikimedia Foundation, Sweden, also lots of[br]other companies, for example.
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And I decided to give this talk because there is[br]if you are on a Wikimedia website, for
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example, Wikipedia, there is some obvious[br]software there. Of course, the wiki
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software itself, which allows you to view[br]and edit pages. There are a lot of
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extensions, about 130 deployed on[br]Wikimedia servers, but there's also lots
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of software around, which pretty often[br]isn't very visible.
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Wikimedia Tech world is pretty complex, it's all free and[br]open source software, and some areas are
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actually fully covered by volunteers, and[br]especially I'm going to be in the bots,
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gadgets, user scripts, tools, and, a bit,[br]mobile apps area today. We have many
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communities, many languages, for example,[br]there's already more than 300 Wikipedias
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when it comes to different languages. So[br]there's a lot of diverse interests, use
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cases, technical needs. You can probably[br]imagine a few things technically already
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when it comes to different scripts used in[br]different cultures or right-to-left, left-
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to-right. Many other examples like this.[br]And as everything is Free and Open Source,
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a lot of volunteers experiment with new[br]ideas they have and also bridge some
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workflow gaps that might exist for these[br]communities and maybe other communities
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are not even aware of that. So pretty[br]often it happens, that some
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community members come up with some ideas[br]and over time they evolve. Sometimes they
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even become a code repository or a gadget[br]that also gets copied to another Wikimedia
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site like a different language Wikipedia.[br]These kinds of things. And earlier this
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year, some people decided that it would be[br]beautiful to appreciate the work and
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create a showcase of the most impressive[br]software solutions which were implemented
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outside of the Wikimedia Core Code[br]repository and the extensions.
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Both to celebrate the software solutions and also[br]the people behind the tools. Because this
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is a lot about ideas, about passion, about[br]skills. Pretty often also finding maybe
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somebody who has more experience or[br]knowledge in a certain culture. If you
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cannot create something yourself, and[br]teaming up. So, early this year, the idea
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came up to celebrate such great pieces of[br]software by creating an award. And there
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was a Wikimedia conference, I think, in[br]August in Stockholm, it's called
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Wikimania, which is not only about[br]technical aspects, it's really about
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everything related to the Wikimedia[br]communities. And we, beforehand, there was
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there were a few people who came together[br]and tried to find categories and, for
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tools to give an award to in these[br]categories. So I'm basically remixing this
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award session from earlier this year here[br]without giving out awards. And my hope is
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that you might see some great stuff,[br]might find some stuff interesting.
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It's not necessarily if you run your own[br]Mediawiki installation on your server,
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some stuff might be too Wikimedia-specific[br]use cases, but maybe you might get some
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ideas or also stuff you weren't aware of[br]and might want to use. Because there are a
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lot of tools out there, as I said, and[br]sometimes it's really hard to discover
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them because they're. soundproblems Oh, thank you,[br]because they might be on on separate
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wikis. All right, so the first category[br]was or is experience, and it was won by
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the locator tool by Simon04. It's a tool[br]that helps you adding the geocode, the
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exact position to existing images,[br]especially on Wikimedia Commons, which is
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the place to share free media images,[br]videos, things like this. And why it
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received this prize is because it's really[br]intuitive and easy to use. You can add
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coordinates to one or more files. You can[br]find it in user preferences. So it's a bit
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easier to discover. It's available in many[br]languages, it had great tutorials.
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Actively maintained and it's been used[br]already a lot. So this is the tool.
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I wonder if I should zoom in a bit. It's[br]called locator tool and you can enter a
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category name here. For example, I have[br]one hand less than usual I realize.
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"Coolest tool award"… In theory it should[br]also autocomplete. Let's try. Showcases.
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Maybe if I… let's try something[br]else, then, I mean, that's what
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autocomplete is for. And let's load. So in[br]theory, you get the map here with a
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pointer on it. Or pointers of the files in[br]this category. In practice, I probably
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chose a bad example, and the Wi-Fi isn't[br]that fast. Or maybe none of the images in
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that category already has a location. That[br]might also be the case here. It's not the
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category I tried beforehand when I tried[br]to prepare this session. Sorry for that.
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I'll go back to the screenshot, where[br]you can hopefully imagine how things
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should look like. The next one would[br]be HotCat, which is a pretty tiny
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codebase, actually, but used a lot.[br]And "cat" in this case stands for
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Categories, because that is one way to[br]organize, for example, files on Wikimedia
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Commons, but also articles on[br]Wikipedias. So this is a screenshot
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from a file on Wikimedia Commons. And at[br]the bottom you can see the categories,
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and you can easily add categories via this[br]tool and also remove, change, add
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categories. And it's also pretty[br]discoverable via the user preferences. So
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to compare this, how much should I zoom[br]in? This here, down here you can see the
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categories, how it usually looks. [br]Basically just the names, and you can
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click the categories to get to the[br]overview page. If you've enabled the
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gadgets, you see a few more buttons here,[br]which are added by JavaScript so you can
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easily remove a category or add a category[br]by clicking the plus at the very end.
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And then you could also type-ahead and add a[br]new category. It works on almost all
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wikis, it actually has the highest number[br]when it comes to users. And yeah, as
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usual, code is public. Several people[br]contributed.
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"Impact". There is Internet Archive Bot by cyberpower, you[br]probably can guess a little bit from the
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name what it's supposed to do. We are not[br]running an archive service. We're not
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archive.org. But pretty often,[br]Internet websites or pages go down or get
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removed or get moved. And as especially[br]Wikipedia articles have a lot of
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references, then suddenly you cannot check[br]for references anymore. Or if that
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statement is actually true because that[br]website got down. But there is the
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Internet Archive and they archive[br]regularly websites and Web pages by
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crawling the Internet. And then this[br]little Bot replaces those links and, or
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references in, for example, Wikipedia[br]articles at the bottom by the link to
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Internet Archive. So you can still[br]actually reach the Page, that was
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referenced a while ago when that page[br]still existed. And the great thing about
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this is that it automates work that[br]usually would be very cumbersome and very
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tiresome to do, and the configuration also[br]depends on local wiki needs. As an example
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I won't show you now running Internet Archive Bot [br]on some page,
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but you can see here, I basically took the last[br]edits, a totally random one on English
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Wikipedia. And you can see here that this[br]is a history of that article called
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Gilberto Hernandez Ortega. And this is the[br]last edit that Internet Archive Bot made
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on English Wikipedia by replacing this[br]obviously dead link here that you can see
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on the left by a link to web.archive.org.[br]So if you go to that article on English
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Wikipedia and you want to go to that[br]reference, you actually see the reference
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and not a dead link, that's what it does.[br]Then we had a "reusable" category.
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If you wonder where we are, if you get tired,[br]this is the fourth out of 10. That's page
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views by MusicAnimal, Kaldari, Marcel Ruiz[br]Forns. It does what it says.
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It's basically getting an idea how often does a[br]certain page on one of the Wikimedia sites
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get accessed. So it's a pretty simple[br]graph, but that can be pretty useful when
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when you want to have statistics, maybe[br]not necessarily about… well, also, some
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people want to find out if… which articles[br]are the most popular ones on some
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Wikipedias. Some people want to find that[br]out. But for me, for example, it's pretty
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useful when when there are, when it comes[br]to technical documentation on
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mediawiki.org and I wonder, OK, these two[br]pages kind of overlap when it comes to
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their content and I would like to merge[br]them. But which one is more popular and
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which way should I merge it. So these[br]things can be pretty useful.
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You can include all wikis. You can also change[br]the time frame. You can get statistics
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over a year now, that was recently[br]implemented. Before, it was per month.
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And in life this, these are two pages[br]I'm comparing on meta.wikimedia.org.
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You can see that I'm looking at the daily[br]statistics and in a certain time frame,
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which you can change here, and I'm[br]comparing these two pages called the
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Coolest Tool Award page and a page called[br]Requests for New Languages. And so here
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you can see like on which day, how many[br]times those two pages were accessed.
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Then there is quick statements by Magnus. [br]That's true, that's true. I tried to
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access that earlier, and it somehow didn't[br]work for me when preparing this. So in
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theory, it's a powerful editor for[br]Wikidata. You can use statements,
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labels, descriptions and aliases to add[br]and remove them, via rather simple
0:15:06.000,0:15:12.820
text commands and you can see simply by[br]the numbers on Wikidata that it's
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pretty popular. As I said, I wasn't able[br]to play with that yet myself. So I can
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only read this text for you right now. So,[br]you can prepare things already in a
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spreadsheet or a text editor to to run[br]several commands in a row.
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Batch edits, basically, semi-automatically. And there's[br]also other tools like OpenRefine, the
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Disambiguater, which also use this tool.[br]So as it was down, I could only go to its
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help page and looked a little bit at the[br]statements down here. I hope that one
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day I'm going to find time to try this[br]myself. Let's see.
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Then, for developers, an award was given to MediaWiki Code[br]Search by Legoktm. Because, once upon a
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time, there were, there was, for example,[br]a service by Google to do search
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explicitly, like, public code, source code[br]repositories, and we wanted to have that,
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especially for Wikimedia code. So[br]everything that's in WikiMedia git,
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Gerrit, I don't think it supports stuff[br]that… all our Wikimedia code repositories
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that are in GitHub or somewhere else. It's[br]a pretty simple interface. You can see on
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the top you can filter by categories, in[br]which code bases you're looking for a
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certain expression. Gerrit, it says[br]here at the bottom. And this is super easy
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to use. Well, at least, if you know a[br]little bit of regular expressions or if
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you just want to enter the name of a[br]function, for example, because one very
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or, a great use case we actually have is,[br]when some function gets deprecated or even
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later on even removed in the MediaWiki[br]core code base. Of course, somebody needs
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to find and update all the extensions out[br]there, which might rely on that very
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function in the MediaWiki core code base.[br]And this makes it way easier.
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Of course you could also locally check out all the[br]extension repositories and then grep and
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try to find that. But this makes it[br]especially, for those, or most people,
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I guess, who don't have a complete check out[br]of all extensions and code repositories on
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their own computer, to quickly use it on[br]the Internet online. I guess I don't need
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to show you how to enter a search string[br]here. Still, if I, for example, enter,
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getText, which would be a function name,[br]you'd then get the results listed by
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repository. And then you could filter on[br]the top. If the server or the Internet is
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fast enough. I might get back to you[br]later.
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Seventh one out of ten we awarded is the "Mobile" area, there is a[br]Commons mobile app which is also entirely
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run, managed, worked on by volunteers like[br]Josephine, Yuvi, Neshlihan, Vivek.
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It allows you to upload photos to Wikimedia[br]Commons directly from your mobile phone or
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from your smartphone, and you can[br]also, of course, add categories, or view
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nearby missing images. So if you use your[br]GPS, if you know your location, that can
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be helpful to find out which articles, for[br]example, on Wikipedia, still lack
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images and view your contributions to[br]Commons in its own gallery. Those numbers
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are probably now outdated. But what is[br]impressive to me is simply the large
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number of different people who have[br]already contributed to the code base.
0:19:52.530,0:19:59.580
Still no results. OK. I don't think[br]I'm going to play that YouTube video for
0:19:59.580,0:20:05.290
for you now. Plus, I haven't sorted out[br]the sound beforehand, I realize. But you
0:20:05.290,0:20:12.250
can… oh, this just shows some of the[br]images uploaded via it, but it's a pretty
0:20:12.250,0:20:21.850
intuitive user interface. It's also[br]interesting to see that of course, it
0:20:21.850,0:20:30.510
also makes uploading content a bit easier[br]that might not be suitable for Wikimedia
0:20:30.510,0:20:38.170
Commons, like, for example, your selfies[br]of you and your friends.
0:20:38.170,0:20:43.220
But I think that's also being worked on and better[br]filter nowadays, for example, by
0:20:43.220,0:20:54.400
categorizing if this is a completely new[br]user and these kinds of things on Commons.
0:20:54.400,0:21:06.309
Then the category "Newcomer" is called NOA[br]Upload Tool by HappeJ, Sohmen. So this
0:21:06.309,0:21:13.310
takes scientific Open Access articles out[br]there, and fetches the images included in
0:21:13.310,0:21:20.630
them, and then anybody can help deciding[br]if this is suitable when it comes to the
0:21:20.630,0:21:27.340
content of, I mean, the license is already[br]pretty clear. But the content, if this
0:21:27.340,0:21:33.250
could be helpful on Wikimedia Commons. So[br]you go to the website, basically you get a
0:21:33.250,0:21:38.220
random image and you can help. Could or[br]should this be uploaded to Wikimedia
0:21:38.220,0:21:46.750
Commons to make it broader available to[br]make it more discoverable? It's beautiful
0:21:46.750,0:21:53.590
because it also gets a bit more into Open[br]Science. It's probably the most simple
0:21:53.590,0:21:59.730
user interface in this collection here,[br]and it does the attribution correctly.
0:21:59.730,0:22:10.340
Randomized. That's probably also[br]something. So I went to that tool.
0:22:10.340,0:22:19.380
And as you can see, you get a random image. [br]So the caption would be taken over and you
0:22:19.380,0:22:24.590
can click "Mark for upload" or "next[br]image". To actually upload it, you will…
0:22:24.590,0:22:38.330
It's probably a bit small… you would have[br]to log in, of course, first and authenticate.
0:22:38.330,0:22:42.651
Then when it comes to[br]outreach, more to social activities, there
0:22:42.651,0:22:54.320
is a programs and events dashboard by Sage[br]and others. So this is a bit more when it
0:22:54.320,0:22:59.670
comes to the teaching part or running[br]workshops for, for example, editors,
0:22:59.670,0:23:06.620
writers, uploading media. Or, for example,[br]Wikiversity, which is another Wikimedia
0:23:06.620,0:23:16.940
site which has courses. And this helps you[br]to get an idea how much outcome, how much
0:23:16.940,0:23:21.390
effect your program has. And it's pretty[br]useful and actually used by quite some
0:23:21.390,0:23:26.030
event organizers out there, for example,[br]by the Wikimedia chapters in quite some
0:23:26.030,0:23:34.690
countries. You can create and manage[br]education programs, you, as I said, track
0:23:34.690,0:23:41.450
some metrics and it's been used for more[br]than 100, or, with more than 100 000
0:23:41.450,0:23:50.490
students and editors, over a million[br]articles since 2010.
0:23:50.490,0:23:56.210
So this is the default view you would end up with on the[br]programs and event dashboard.
0:23:56.210,0:24:01.670
And you can see here the campaigns on the left, for[br]example, this was the Art and Feminism
0:24:01.670,0:24:07.830
2018 campaign. Related programs that were[br]run. And, for example, the number of
0:24:07.830,0:24:16.280
articles created, edited, and the number[br]of editors here, in the very end.
0:24:16.280,0:24:25.830
So you get an idea how much, actually, outcome[br]you have.
0:24:25.830,0:24:34.730
And, last but not least, probably Eggbeater doesn't tell you[br]anything. That was the logo we chose for
0:24:34.730,0:24:43.180
the award, and it's basically the[br]special or lifetime award or something
0:24:43.180,0:24:48.169
like that. That's probably how you would[br]translate it. Twinkle. It's also a
0:24:48.169,0:24:58.060
JavaScript gadget by AzaToth, Ioeth,[br]Amathea, atlight, MusikAnimal, AmoryMeltzer.
0:24:58.060,0:25:01.770
And this is when, when[br]you're a bit more of an experienced,
0:25:01.770,0:25:07.980
for example, Wikipedia user, it helps you[br]a lot with maintenance tasks like dealing
0:25:07.980,0:25:15.500
reverting vandalism, unscontract–[br]unconstructive edits. Which makes
0:25:15.500,0:25:21.850
administrative tasks way easier. It's[br]been around for 15 years, it has pretty
0:25:21.850,0:25:33.179
good help. And to give you a simple idea,[br]this would be the normal or nearly normal
0:25:33.179,0:25:38.640
view, I think I also have some some custom[br]gadgets enabled, on on a Wikipedia page
0:25:38.640,0:25:45.780
when you're logged in and you can see up[br]here, read, edit, view history.
0:25:45.780,0:25:52.480
The watch list, star button. When I enable[br]Twinkle, you see there's another drop
0:25:52.480,0:25:59.990
down, which leads to, for example, the[br]first link request, speedy deletion.
0:25:59.990,0:26:09.280
According to CSD, I should probably[br]know what that means. Speedy deletion?
0:26:09.280,0:26:14.820
And a few other options like "show most recent[br]diff", "unlink backlinks", a lot of
0:26:14.820,0:26:19.120
functionality that is way easier to access[br]and more common, especially if you try to
0:26:19.120,0:26:27.150
revert vandalism and watch pages.
0:26:27.150,0:26:36.350
This is a photo of, at the end of that actual award ceremony, of all the [br]people being around. There were also definitely a few
0:26:36.350,0:26:41.360
maintainers, developers, stewards of these[br]code bases around. So not everybody was
0:26:41.360,0:26:54.190
present at that conference, but we could[br]actually hand out some awards which were eggbeaters.
0:26:54.190,0:26:58.690
And what was this was[br]basically about was, as I said earlier,
0:26:58.690,0:27:04.200
appreciating, all the code in between,[br]that might not be obvious to you.
0:27:04.200,0:27:08.870
Sometimes, it might not even be obvious to[br]you that this is custom code or a gadget,
0:27:08.870,0:27:13.840
not in the core functionality, added by a[br]volunteer, because it is enabled by
0:27:13.840,0:27:17.970
default. And you just expect like, OK,[br]this is probably part of the core
0:27:17.970,0:27:23.350
software, but it's actually not. And, of[br]course, also, thanks a lot to all the
0:27:23.350,0:27:30.430
users of these tools. So if anything[br]was interesting here or if you have more
0:27:30.430,0:27:37.179
curiosity, you will find links on[br]meta.wikimedia.org, on the page
0:27:37.179,0:27:41.789
Coolest Tool Award. If you are generally[br]interested in the technical parts of it,
0:27:41.789,0:27:48.429
not necessarily only as a user using these[br]tools, I would recommend how to contribute
0:27:48.429,0:27:56.869
on mediawiki.org, which both covers how to[br]get technically involved, but also other areas.
0:27:56.869,0:28:01.730
For example, of course, [br]editing, but also, design, local user
0:28:01.730,0:28:09.010
groups, outreach or other things. So these[br]are probably only the credits.
0:28:09.010,0:28:12.822
So I'm done. Thank you.
0:28:12.822,0:28:21.999
applause
0:28:21.999,0:28:27.560
Herald: Hello, hello? Yeah. Thank you,[br]Andre! So do we have any questions in the
0:28:27.560,0:28:32.390
audience? If you do raise your hands and I[br]will hand you my microphone?
0:28:32.390,0:28:37.870
Andre: Basically, I would even say feel[br]free to ask anything. I mean, I might not
0:28:37.870,0:28:42.309
know the answer. It's not that I'm[br]actively working in all of these tools or
0:28:42.309,0:28:51.159
anything, but I can try to find out.[br]Q: I thank you for your speech.
0:28:51.159,0:28:58.270
Do you have a favorite tool for locations of[br]articles, how to add them, or edit them?
0:28:58.270,0:29:03.559
Andre: A favorite tool for locations of[br]articles, how to edit them?
0:29:03.559,0:29:10.730
Q: You can have locations for the images,[br]but also add locations to articles on the
0:29:10.730,0:29:16.419
other side? And I find it unhandy to[br]always copy paste a code with geolocation
0:29:16.419,0:29:20.850
and all that stuff. And I would also[br]prefer there to have a tool where I could
0:29:20.850,0:29:25.500
click on a map and say, OK, it's there.[br]Maybe it's existing.
0:29:25.500,0:29:30.929
Andre: That that is a good question. So,[br]yeah, so you basically go to an article
0:29:30.929,0:29:36.740
and you hope for some button, which[br]probably opens a map and then you say it's
0:29:36.740,0:29:41.900
here on this map. And then you edit with[br]one click the coordinates to the article,
0:29:41.900,0:29:50.220
I guess. Right? I'm not sure myself. I[br]would have to try to find out. Let me come
0:29:50.220,0:30:00.169
back to you later, please.[br]Herald: Any other questions? I don't think
0:30:00.169,0:30:03.799
I see any, but so then again, thank you,[br]have some applause for Andre please!
0:30:03.799,0:30:32.000
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