MarioWiki:Proposals: Difference between revisions
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#{{User|Stooben Rooben}} - Your overall goal for internationalism is highly considerate and very thoughtful towards our viewers who are from locations ''outside'' of North America, but I have to oppose. My reasons are that inconsistency in an encyclopedia (especially one of high standards, such as ours), is very unprofessional. Mentioning the PAL regions' names for games and objects in the opening sentence of an article is good enough; it still keeps this valuable information, yet it keeps all of our articles consistent. If I'm not mistaken, this proposal would also get rid of {{tem|anotherlanguage}}. I'd also like to note that Wikipedia, an encyclopedia with a much larger user base, and an even higher page view ratio does not do this. All articles have a North American English name, so long as there is one to provide. (An example is that [[wikipedia:Mario Strikers Charged|''Mario Strikers Charged'' is not called ''Mario Strikers Charged Football'']].) I'm not saying that we should follow Wikipedia to a tee, but overall, I feel that the inconsistency will only cause confusion and unprofessionalism throughout the site. | #{{User|Stooben Rooben}} - Your overall goal for internationalism is highly considerate and very thoughtful towards our viewers who are from locations ''outside'' of North America, but I have to oppose. My reasons are that inconsistency in an encyclopedia (especially one of high standards, such as ours), is very unprofessional. Mentioning the PAL regions' names for games and objects in the opening sentence of an article is good enough; it still keeps this valuable information, yet it keeps all of our articles consistent. If I'm not mistaken, this proposal would also get rid of {{tem|anotherlanguage}}. I'd also like to note that Wikipedia, an encyclopedia with a much larger user base, and an even higher page view ratio does not do this. All articles have a North American English name, so long as there is one to provide. (An example is that [[wikipedia:Mario Strikers Charged|''Mario Strikers Charged'' is not called ''Mario Strikers Charged Football'']].) I'm not saying that we should follow Wikipedia to a tee, but overall, I feel that the inconsistency will only cause confusion and unprofessionalism throughout the site. | ||
#{{User|Stumpers}} - MeritC is correct that the website operates out of the US and most of our users (by far) are North American. I oppose this simply because of how confusing such a regulation would be to implement. For the editors: It would require users who wish to use the linking function to memorize where each title was originally released and whether each subject's first appearance was released in North America or Europe first to avoid linking to redirects. Furthermore, we would have to comb through the entire Wiki, conforming it to this new standard. It's going to be very messy and confusing without some way to monitor which articles have been updated and which ones have not. For the readers: We'd simply be confusing them, especially in the time it would take us to update the Wiki for this new policy. It's going to lead to a large amount of clicks just to find out that, for example, ''[[Mario Strikers Charged Football]]'' is NOT a new game where Mario and friends play American football, but rather our new name for a subject that we previously called ''Mario Strikers Charged''. Yes, it's a hassle for our non-US editors and readers to have to check around for the American names of subjects, but it's easier than making every contributor find out the correct name according to this policy. And, for the record, I'm not being an imperialist. :) If most users here were from, say, the UK, I'd be up for using the UK names. | #{{User|Stumpers}} - MeritC is correct that the website operates out of the US and most of our users (by far) are North American. I oppose this simply because of how confusing such a regulation would be to implement. For the editors: It would require users who wish to use the linking function to memorize where each title was originally released and whether each subject's first appearance was released in North America or Europe first to avoid linking to redirects. Furthermore, we would have to comb through the entire Wiki, conforming it to this new standard. It's going to be very messy and confusing without some way to monitor which articles have been updated and which ones have not. For the readers: We'd simply be confusing them, especially in the time it would take us to update the Wiki for this new policy. It's going to lead to a large amount of clicks just to find out that, for example, ''[[Mario Strikers Charged Football]]'' is NOT a new game where Mario and friends play American football, but rather our new name for a subject that we previously called ''Mario Strikers Charged''. Yes, it's a hassle for our non-US editors and readers to have to check around for the American names of subjects, but it's easier than making every contributor find out the correct name according to this policy. And, for the record, I'm not being an imperialist. :) If most users here were from, say, the UK, I'd be up for using the UK names. | ||
#{{User|1337Yoshi}} - Per all. | |||
====Comments==== | ====Comments==== |
Revision as of 15:14, February 10, 2009
A proposal section works like a discussion page: comments are brought up and replied to using indents (colons, such as : or ::::) and all edits are signed using the code {{user|User name}}. Signing with the signature code ~~~(~) is not allowed due to technical issues. How To
The times are in EDT, and are set so that the user is more likely to be online at those times (after work/school, weekend nights). If a proposal is added on Saturday night at 11:59 PM EDT, the deadline is the next Saturday night at 8:00 PM. If it is a minute later, the deadline is a day plus 15 hours (Sunday), as opposed to a day minus 4 hours. New FeaturesCreate Good Articles 2.0Hmmm... how to start? Oh, yes. I'm sure many of you have seen articles that are very good, but not good enough to become a FA (like Luigi's Mansion or Koopa Troopa), so I propose we create a new category called "Good Articles", this will give an acknowledgement (long word) to this articles. In order to become a FA, an article needs to fulfill all of this, so a Good Article will only need to fulfill most of them, excluding points number 7 and 9, and changing the 4000 characters to 2500. Who's with me? Proposer: Tucayo (talk) CreateDON'T create
CommentsIn all honesty, this sounds like a pretty good idea. However, before I vote, I'd like to ask a question. Exactly which standards would an article need to meet in order to become a "Good Article"? Stooben Rooben (talk) They have this on wookieepedia. YourBuddyBill (talk) Okay, thanks Tucayo! Stooben Rooben (talk) On Wookiepedia, they have a Good Articles system - but that is only for articles that basically meet all FA requirements except for achieving a certain level of content. Here, that would be the 4,000 characters rule. By Wookiepedia standards, an article that filled all FA criteria except rule 11 would be a Good Article. The criteria Tucayo provided left out rules like must be sourced with all appearances and cannot have an improvement template on the page. So these "good articles" may end up being not very "good" at all. -- Son of Suns (talk)
K, done, but it seems that pont 6 is important, so I didnt include it Tucayo (talk) Wikipedia has these, and it works for them. Besides, it'd be a good way to highlight articles that are as good as they can be, but not good enough to be featured. On the other hand, we may have too few articles for it to be prudent to have GAs and FAs.Twentytwofiftyseven (talk)
Create a Rules PageHow do I begin? Oh yes, umm...I am making a proposal for a rules page. Like any other wiki, website, or collaborative project, we must have a set of rules and a page to find them. I wanted to create this myself, but I also wanted community approval. So how about it? Proposer: Clay Mario (talk) Support
OpposeCommentsWe have many Rules pages. See: Category:MarioWiki Policy. -- Son of Suns (talk)
Funny, I was going to write two versions of the MarioWiki Rule/guidebook (it's in my to-do list), the professional version; for you SoS. ...And the more user-based/funny version, for me, Neu, and maybe others with comical drawings I can make with it. :3 Oh, MarioWiki:Help is like a contents section; from a book. And the one Mr. SoS posted, it's like you can make whole pages appear together with {{MarioWiki:x}} and read them all together as a bundle. :o Sadly, I don't have time for that right at this moment. :o RAP (talk) The book will cover just about every single rule that is in effect, if I can try that is. :o What Son of Suns said, exclamation mark, smiley face, etc. Dom (talk)
RemovalsNone at the moment. Splits & MergesNone at the moment. ChangesUse First Official English Title for ArticlesAlthough we are an English wiki, we are first and foremost an international English wiki, reaching out to English speakers from all over the world, including many non-native speakers. However, some of our de facto naming practices for articles have shown a heavy North American bias. Therefore, I believe we should create a rule stating that the name of articles should reflect the official English name from their region of first release. All official English names would be stated in the introduction of course; only the title would change. For example, Mario Strikers Charged would be changed into Mario Strikers Charged Football, as that game was released in Europe before North America. Similarly, articles about subjects from games released in Europe or Australia before North America would also have their titles changed. In this case, the kart articles from Mario Kart Wii would change to their PAL titles (example: Daytripper becomes Royal Racer). Games and article subjects first released in North America would keep their original titles. I feel this is the best way to resolve any conflicts about different English titles from around the world - release dates are the most objective standard we have. Proposer: Son of Suns (talk) Support
Oppose
CommentsTo respond to MeritC:
Again, this is not for every article - only those subjects which were released in a different English region before the United States (and most of the time, the titles are the same anyways). -- Son of Suns (talk)
MiscellaneousNone at the moment. |