User:JWSchmidt/Blog/4 September 2007
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This page is part of JWSchmidt's Wikiversity blog Feel free to add comments. |
| 22 September - Experts |
| 27 January - Your Banned |
| 14 January - Wikiversity Bans |
| 14 November - Custodianship |
| 19 October - Review Part II |
| 10 October - My vacation |
| 16 September - Moulton |
| 15 September - Forking |
| 7 September - Distorting |
| 27 August - Wikipedia studies |
| 1 March 2008 - The real world |
| 12 January - Fair Use and the GFDL |
| 2 January 2008 - Wiki Council |
| ---- start 2008 ---- |
| 31 December - Participatory Learning |
| 19 December - Foundation Changes |
| 1 December - Changing the GFDL? |
| 13 November - What is Wikiversity? |
| 10 November - Expert editors (part II) |
| 14 October 2007 - Vandal Wiki |
| 20 September - Collaborative video interface |
| 4 September - Open Source Crusade |
| 31 August - CheckUser |
| 4 August - Collaborative videos |
| 20 July - Options for video-in-wiki |
| 1 July - Networking Web 2.0 Websites |
| 7 June 2007 - GFDL violations |
| 27 May - Wikiversity namespace |
| 22 May 2007 - Wikiversity tagline |
| 20 May - The newbie game |
| 16 May - Tangled Hierarchies |
| 12 May - Navigation boxes |
| 11 May 2007 - Forced editing |
| 9 May - Wikipedia Learning |
| 6 May - Music collaborations |
| 25 Mar - Reliable Sources |
| 17 Mar - Version flagging |
| 11 Mar - Research policy discussion |
| 10 Mar 2007 - Credentials |
| 3 Mar - Free media files |
| 28 Feb - Delete or develop? |
| 27 Feb 2007 - Main Page |
| 25 Feb - Science and Protoscience |
| 23 Feb - Complementing Wikipedia |
| 21 Feb - Copyleft media files |
| 19 Feb - Gratis versus Libre |
| 18 Feb 2007 - Referees |
| 16 Feb - MediaWiki interface |
| 15 Feb - Content development projects |
| 14 Feb - Scope of Research |
| 13 Feb 2007 - Review Board |
| 12 Feb - Rounded corners |
| 11 Feb - Open vs free content |
| 10 Feb - Research guidelines |
| 9 Feb - Learning resource diversity |
| 8 February - Wikiversity referees. |
| 7 February 2007 - Wikio. |
| 5 February - Research policy. |
| 2 February - Portal cleanup done. |
| 31 January - Reliable sources. |
| 29 January - Learning projects and materials. |
| 27 January - Recording voice chat. |
| 25 January - Animated GIF files with GIMP. |
| 23 January - User page cleanup. |
| 21 January 2007 - List of portals. |
| 20 January - 2 more portals. "Courses" |
| 19 Jan, - Portals and templates. |
| 18 January site statistics - 20,000 pages. |
| 18 January - Creating and organizing portals. |
| 17 January - Categories of Wikiversity schools. |
| 16 Jan. - Featured content development projects. |
| 15 January - Wikiversity status at 5 months. |
| 14 January - The "Topic:" namespace |
| 13 January - Featured content |
| 13 January - Wikiversity Bugs |
| 12 January 2007 - Start of the blog |
| ---- start 2007 ---- |
| 24 October, 2006 - Wikiversity history |
| 26 April, 2005 - Wiki reality games |
| 17 March, 2004 - Semantic prosthetic |
| edit this list |
Is education the goal or some kind of Open Source software religion?
The Wikimedia Foundation is built upon the concept of open content. "The mission of the Wikimedia Foundation is to empower and engage people around the world to collect and develop neutral educational content under a free content license or in the public domain, and to disseminate it effectively and globally." (Mission)
Now we have a Software Policy Draft that tries to expand the "open content" approach of Wikimedia projects to an "open source software only" crusade.
At Wikiversity we have learning resources that make use of all types of software and the goal is education. We are trying to develop server-side resources for learn-by-doing software projects (see Wikiversity:Sandbox Server). Do we really need doctrinal restrictions on the software that Wikiversity participants can use and learn about? The Wikimedia Foundation has always been and will always be a friend of open source software, but some folks seem to cross the line into an Open Source Software Religion and that can start getting in the way of the educational mission of the Foundation rather than supporting it. Is this new "Software Policy" proposal crossing the line?
If we look at the inability of the Wikimedia Foundation to make Wikimania accessible to the world, we might wonder if damage to the educational mission (due to the "Open Source Software Only" reflex) started long ago. Have monks from some Open Source Software Religion taken over the Wikimedia Foundation? It seems like these monks are on a crusade and that they do not care to place the educational mission first.....their first priority seems to be holy war against proprietary software. Is "open source software only" fanaticism in the best interests of the Wikimedia Foundation? From an educational perspective, learning about how to use proprietary software is a valid educational goal for many Wikiversity participants. Would the "open source software only" policy proposal get in the way of the Wikiversity mission?
[edit] Updates
- The "policy" proposal has already been changed to a "Statement of Principles".
- File format policy
- related: Working copy
- Format Conversion - Flash and Ogg.