---------- Original Message ----------
From: George Herbert <george.herb...@gmail.com>


Let me pose this a different way, however.  Take UI entirely out of
the picture - the Wikimedia Foundation is all about supporting
projects that gather and create information for the public good,
presenting that to the public, and creating software to encourage
that.

------

There was a time when the Wikimedia Foundation, or rather those involved with 
the various sister projects, were interested in some leading edge and bleeding 
edge stuff.  Considerable experimentation was encouraged and some amazing 
things happened that pushed ideas and concepts to some pretty interesting 
extremes.

Much of what we know today as Wikipedia certainly wouldn't exist today.  I got 
started in this whole mess back in the days when Gnupedia was rolled into 
Nupedia and those two communities merged together.  I remember numerous 
discussions on even trying to come up with how to edit content, what sort of 
raw standards ought to be invoked, and how to get participants to show up and 
contribute what they knew.  Using a wiki in a democratic fashion was actually a 
rather novel concept, and in fact brought in a whole new group of users.  
Seriously, with this sort of attitude, Wikipedia would have never even been 
tried in the first place.  I am so glad this particular mindset was not in 
place back in those days.

I've also been involved in working on the various sister projects, and even 
helped to get Wikiversity going in the first place.  Indeed, one of the 
founding missions of Wikiversity was explicitly to try out new technology, to 
"conduct original research" on various levels.  Yes, I know that was a sticking 
point with the board of trustees when Wikiversity was started too, so it wasn't 
entirely without controversy.  Still, there are various sorts of original 
research that has been happening that is tied to the Wikimedia community... 
some of which are directly supported by the Foundation and others that are 
instead in the periphery and more side projects of a sub-set of the larger 
community.  Some are rather well known, and others are much more obscure.

Fine, I'll admit this is more of a research project to see if anything could be 
done here, and there is no guarantee that much may come from this.  I'm not 
even suggesting that the WMF ought to give even modest support in the form of 
server space for experimentation on this concept or even permitting a wiki page 
that would act as a central community message board and idea center for 
something like this.  That is something that can or can't happen, but it sort 
of seems rough that the idea is dismissed completely out of hand before it is 
even started in the first place.  It is also unfortunate that even discussion 
about what sorts of ideas might be useful under such a project is shut down 
before the discussion starts at all.

-- Robert Horning

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