Currently the bots and UW have some intersection of valid use cases, but
I'd mostly call them tools for different things.
http://tools.wmflabs.org/flickr2commons/ is working rather well now,
although it misses a couple features:
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Flickr2commons
If flickr2commo
Hurrah! This looks awesome, Yuvi.
On Aug 29, 2013 3:30 PM, "Yuvi Panda" wrote:
> Relevant, I'd like to think :)
>
>
> -- Forwarded message --
> From: Yuvi Panda
> Date: Fri, Aug 30, 2013 at 3:10 AM
> Subject: Nicer, more useful Campaign pages coming soon!
> To: Wiki Loves Monume
Jean-Frederic is correct. The Flickr importing feature in UploadWizard is
currently limited to admins and image reviewers. If the Flickr Upload Bot
is going to be retired, someone should probably start an RFC on Commons
about opening up the Flickr importing in UploadWizard to everyone.
Personally,
Hi,
With the pending toolserver shutdown, I was thinking about retiring Flickr
Upload Bot. However, this bot is apparently still used about 2000-4000
times per month.
I was under the impression that the upload wizard would replace this bot,
however, I couldn't find any references to this. Does an
Hi Bryan,
With the pending toolserver shutdown, I was thinking about retiring Flickr
> Upload Bot. However, this bot is apparently still used about 2000-4000
> times per month.
> I was under the impression that the upload wizard would replace this bot,
> however, I couldn't find any references to
Le 30/08/2013 11:30, Jean-Frédéric a écrit :
Hi Gilles,
Thanks for your email!
Hi Jean-Frédéric,
Since I'm new to the Wikimedia ecosystem, I have many questions on
how to do that:
- first of all, is it acceptable to associate one (or several)
external links to a file/picture
Hi Gilles,
Thanks for your email!
Since I'm new to the Wikimedia ecosystem, I have many questions on how to
> do that:
> - first of all, is it acceptable to associate one (or several) external
> links to a file/picture stored on Commons?
>
Depends, but generally, yes. We typically link back to s
Dear all,
We've recently released ImageInOsm [1], a mobile application designed to
help OpenStreetMap contributors to better document OSM object using
pictures.
The process is currently very simple:
- a user is nearby a real-life "object",
- using his smartphone, he picks the corresponding OS