User talk:Bob rulz/Archive 2CommentWhat do you think of my recent edits to Salt Lake City? 144.35.254.12 00:35, 23 May 2006 (UTC) Tropical Cyclone WikiProjectHey, I noticed you signed up for the project (seemed odd for you to have taken so long to get round to it, seeing your interest). Anyway, you signed up just after the release of the first newsletter in the spam me section. The link to the current edition is this: Wikipedia:WikiProject Tropical cyclones/Newsletter - if you want to have it here just subst it.--Nilfanion (talk) 21:38, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
History of UtahI have restored the images again -- as I am discussing the native peoples of Utah, I am discussing the environment in which they lived and worked. I am selecting existing images and changing the captions to reflect their relevance. For example -- the wetlands of Northern Utah are a prime example of the type of environment that the Desert Archaic people chose to live in. Since we can't have pictures of those people -- their homelands seem like the next best bet. So please be patient. In time, we will weed out the ones that are truly not relevant. Thank you. WBardwin 06:25, 15 June 2006 (UTC)
Gainesville - estimatesHi, Actually, Census figures are estimates. It's true that the census was blocked from using statistical sampling for reapportionment data, but still, you don't actually think the census bureau tracks down every single person in America, do you? The 2000 census response rate was about 67% - the highest it's been in a while. You can find out more detailes about census methodology at their website. I didn't revert your edited because it's a minor point and because "reports" is accurate just as "estimates" is. but just sending you this as an FYI. Cheers, Chicken Soda
Ello there, Arkansas Traveller.. I'd rather like for you to give your input on the future of List of Sci Fi Channel (United States) programs since it may invariably suffer the same fate as Other films aired on The SciFi Channel, so please do so if time permits. It's a rather pertinant piece of information concerning the Sci Fi Channel, and its demise will prolly compromise the article quite alot. DrWho42 06:26, 4 July 2006 (UTC) Template:User starcraftFYI, Template:User starcraft on your userpage is a dead link. Not sure if it was moved or just deleted. Didn't want to mess with your page in case I screwed things up. --Polkapunk 20:09, 19 July 2006 (UTC) Starcraft: GhostSee the discussion on the talk page. Indefinitely postponed is just a euphemism for cancelled. If it's not in development, it can't be finished. Talkign about it like it will be finished is against crystal ball policies. Blizzard also called Warcraft Adventures is indefinitely postponed. Ace of Sevens 05:40, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
WarlordsThanks for restoring Pronto's well-meant but excessive deletions from the Warlords article. I actually took exception to the same thing, and started writing a message on his talk page where I suggested the very same things that you did, but got bogged down and didn't finish before your edits (due in part to the fact that I'm still intimidated by admins.) So, thanks. --Kizor 20:30, 27 July 2006 (UTC) FYI, both sets of numbers are estimates. The numbers I was using were projections made from the 2000 data found at List of cities in Utah (by population). I have corrected where I can. Also FYI, reverting a revert is generally considered poor Wikipedia:Wikiquette (WP:1RR). I understand *now* that you were, in fact, correct, but I was getting my data from another wikipedia page with "less useful" data. That page needs to be corrected. Thanks for playing, and have fun in Wikipedia! McKay 07:42, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
Hooray!I see that the 2003 Utah snowstorm article was created. Hooray (again)! Remember those two supercells we had in Salt Lake and Provo (if you live in one those areas)? Should there be an article about that, because I heard that Provo had around $13 million in damage, and the Salt Lake East Bench was hit pretty hard, too. I dunno, there's lots of supercells aroud the country, and making articles for each one seems pretty stupid, but it's just that we don't see supercells that often. What do you think? The Runescape Junkie 20:17, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
Re: NewsletterOK, thats fine. I'll try and remember that when I deliver your copy, if you add a sentence on the spam list I might remember more easily. When I send you yours, do you only want the latest version on the subpage? And you don't need to worry about crediting me that much (though I do appreciate it). :)--Nilfanion (talk) 13:39, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
Final state highway naming conventions debateBob rulz, your participation is welcome in the Wikipedia:State route naming conventions poll. Please give your input as to the process by 23:59 UTC on August 8. Regards, Rschen7754 (talk - contribs) 22:59, 5 August 2006 (UTC) Salt Lake ReferencesI'm still around, just not as often :( I believe I added references at the bottom of the article siting all my sources. There were a couple of history books and such. In fact, I think I started the references section. I'll have to ask Mike (Cool Hand Luke) as I know him in RL. Does that help? —JonMoore 20:36, 7 August 2006 (UTC) "Public" Predictions on WikipediaHi there. I remember in high school and college that I used to make forecasts about hurricane seasons, which storms would hit land, how far we'd get down the list, etcetera, etcetera based on pure speculation, and nothing more. The difference between then and now is that at that point, only a handful of people knew I had made such a prediction on the planet and we had it scribbed on a page of some obscure notebook in our own posession that few others were likely to see. Having this type of speculation on the discussion page is much more visible because anyone on the internet can read it, therefore it is "public" for consumption by anyone with an internet connection. Now that Gary Padgett has highlighted wikipedia in his widely-dispersed monthly tropical cyclone summaries, don't be surprised if others use a similar argument or say something similar. If you want to e-mail about this topic, I can send you my e-mail and we can correspond about how these kinds of forecast have been perceived in the past by TPC/NHC (as long as my e-mail address from your personal page is deleted soon afterwards.) It is becoming increasingly likely that someone at NHC is going to view that discussion page, if it hasn't happenned already. Don't consider this the "National Weather Service" line on the topic just because I'm part of it, and this is not a personal attack of any sort. I just am under the impression that wikipedia is an encyclopedia, not a bulletin board, and that the discussion pages are merely about fine points of detail concerning the article itself, not about making predictions per se. In a religious sense, like the Jewish Tanach, not France's Nostradamus. If my impression is wrong, show me the wikipedia guidleline that spells out predictions connected to its articles, and I'll shut up. There are other internet/weather discussion boards where predictions can be made and shared, without attaching it to an online encyclopedia. I'd hate to squelch your enthusiasm for meteorology...I still have it myself, even at 33 and after 13 years in the NWS. =) Thegreatdr 17:20, 8 August 2006 (UTC) A few Great Salt Lake requestsFrom Talk:Great Salt Lake:
I responded that he was correct, but that I was unsure how to add that to the article. Since you have worked extensively on the Salt Lake City article, I wonder if you might have any input as to how we should phrase this info and where it should be added? Second, I wonder if you could possibly whip up some sort of a lake effect section, subsection, or whatever for this article? I ask because you mentioned this in the past and I have exhausted myself somewhat working on this article. Here is a Deseret News source that might be useful, if you have the time: Lake has great impact on storms, weather Lastly, thank you for copy editing this article. I plan to submit it for peer review once it reaches GA status, but before that, I wonder if you have any input on how to improve the article? As a part of this, could you look over and maybe edit the to do list I created awhile back? Currently it mostly deals with what needs to be added, and most of that (perhaps all) was added by me, which makes me a bit uncomfortable as I shouldn't be the only one defining goals. --Lethargy 04:54, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
Weather ideasWhat ideas do you have? That would be great to see! I've been slowly working on individual pages but not so much at the broad level. (Also it tends to get side-tracked as hurricanes take over - after all we are entering the peak of hurricane season) CrazyC83 22:15, 9 August 2006 (UTC) I had been starting to work on an article List of SPC High Risk days and an activity calendar for 2006 (and previous years) based on their risk levels. I am waiting until October or so before I get to winter-related events. CrazyC83 22:17, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
Excellent article! It should be published now I think. CrazyC83 19:37, 15 August 2006 (UTC) Winter 06-07Yes, premature I know. However, I was thinking if there was a major event in September or October, it is better to have it ready (it does occasionally happen in the higher Plains). It won't be well organized until October most likely. I feel they should run from July 1 to June 30 because the vast majority of people visiting here are from the Northern Hemisphere, and there are few areas in the Southern Hemisphere (save Antarctica and nothing is notable there except for record cold) that heavy snow is worthy of mention. It will resemble the Tornadoes of 2006 page (speaking of which, I have the shell for the 2005 article underway, and will add more in the next few weeks). CrazyC83 05:42, 15 August 2006 (UTC) Old stormsGood luck to trying to raise the activity of the Meteorology project, its unfortunate that its inactive like it is. One of the biggest problems is that a much higher proportion of articles in the wider project should be about meteorological phenomena as opposed to individual events. The TC project has a major problem with its core as well and it is much more active. For information on specific storms, the NCDC database should be extemely useful. For example, there is this on the F5 tornado of the 1999 Oklahoma tornado outbreak.--Nilfanion (talk) 17:36, 10 August 2006 (UTC) River JordanWould you have preferred if I had left the link incorrect as it was? I wasn't suggesting the river didn't exist which is why I didn't delete the reference completely. Please don't leave comments as to what I "at least" could have done, really its up to me how much time I spend on wikipedia and at least me removing the incorrect link presumably brought the matter to your attention through your watchlist.--Lucifer(sc) 13:31, 16 August 2006 (UTC) Peer reviewOops, I was using Firefox's Find feature, but I was not searching for the hyphenated lake-effect, so I missed that in the climate section. Also, I had searched for Great Salt Lake, but that wasn't mentioned in the same paragraph as the lake-effect, so I missed it with both searches. As I said, it was a brief glance. I'll look over it more thoroughly now that I have had some sleep. :) --Lethargy 22:55, 18 August 2006 (UTC) Update: I think what is already mentioned on lake-effect is probably sufficient, although perhaps we could squeeze in a link to that severe snowstorm from 2003 (wherever that page is). As for footnotes, everything I have learned came from Wikipedia:Footnotes and the Mozilla Firefox article, which generally has a link to a webpage followed by a period, then the name of the source in italics and a period (e.g Great Salt Lake, Utah. U.S. Geological Survey.), but when I source a newspaper article I leave the author unitalicized (which I don't remember where I found):Utah Lake is overrun with carp. Sara Israelsen, Deseret Morning News. As for the census numbers, I just think it is necessary to provide a source for them, which I am not sure where to find. --Lethargy 23:14, 18 August 2006 (UTC) NFL predictionsNice work! Those predictions seem reasonable, but I bet the Texans aren't that bad this year they were last year. I think they will go for 9-7 this year (:P).In the AFC South, the Titans will be the worst team with 2-14 (damn Vince Young). The Chiefs didn't look good vs. the Texans either, however it's just preseason, so I won't make any predictions here. (I guess my predictions will be wrong too.) We'll see! -- WmE 22:24, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Chris[4] Please come to #wiki-hurricanes on irc.freenode.net so we can settle on an agreement. – Chacor 01:32, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
Could you get all of them to close their tabs/windows, reopen a new one and join server asimov.freenode.net - that would work. – Chacor 01:57, 23 August 2006 (UTC) Utah State Highway WikiProject?Aren't you still part of it? That's what it says on the Project Page, but not on your userpage. Just wondering... Cheers! The RSJ - SPEAK 18:38, 2 September 2006 (UTC) Heh heh, no wonder, there's only four people in it, and one of them doesn't even live in Utah.... Cheers! The RSJ - SPEAK 22:07, 4 September 2006 (UTC) Salt Lake City TornadoSince you are the best weather person in WikiProject Utah, I wonder if you could help me expand and improve the Salt Lake City Tornado article? I have written up what I feel are the first things we need to improve on the talk page, if you want to look over those and add any input. Oh, and I think the Salt Lake City article looks pretty good. I see a few problems with wording and POV (which I might elaborate more on when I look over the article again), but with a little work and a few more citations, I think we can submit this at FAC with a pretty good chance of passing, or at least we might receive input on things we can fix quickly enough to pass. If it becomes too daunting, we could always submit it at the Good Article Collaboration of the week. --Lethargy 21:20, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
--Lethargy 23:45, 5 September 2006 (UTC) Your edits at Running backHello. I'm not sure that I agree that your removal of names was a good idea. Rather than revert you unilaterally, I have started a discussion at the talk page. Please add your thoughts there when you get a chance. --After Midnight 0001 11:54, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
SmileThe RSJ - SPEAK has smiled at you! Smiles promote WikiLove and hopefully this one has made your day better. Spread the WikiLove by smiling to someone else, whether it be someone you have had disagreements with in the past or a good friend. Smile to others by adding {{subst:smile}}, {{subst:smile2}} or {{subst:smile3}} to their talk page with a friendly message. Happy editing! I'm giving these messages to everyone I know, and it's not the wrong kind of WikiLove (lol)... Cheers! UntraveledRoadHi Bob, You mentioned in the Saint George talk page that you had trouble accessing UntraveledRoad. I have been curious if you were still having trouble with it. Thanks, Kelvin Smith http://www.UntraveledRoad.com Bob, You must be using Comcast. They block UntraveledRoad. I suppose they thought it was too high a bandwidth. If you try it somewhere else, it should work. Kelvin Project taggingI've been tagging quite a few for their levels of importance and classification. It's good that we can get started somewhere and figure out where we are now...although the peak of hurricane season is not when the focus is on these other things. CrazyC83 04:15, 15 September 2006 (UTC) AfD Template on Utah English Page...I nominated the article for deletion. Sorry for the simple question, but how do I put the Deletion Template on the page? Sorry for using up space on your page and cheers! The RSJ - SPEAKThe RSJ at the RS Wiki 04:58, 16 September 2006 (UTC)
Utah English AfDSince you actually live in Utah, what do you think? Is Utah English (or Utahnics) a real dialect of English? Just curious (I realize I take too much space on your user talk page, sorry 'bout this). Cheers! •The RSJ• (Main Hub - Rants) 19:50, 17 September 2006 (UTC) WikiProject South ParkI have thought of creating a WikiProject for South Park since it is now near its' 10th anniversary and has more articles than ever. I feel we could all do the following things through this project:
I have seen your South Park fan template and wondered if you were interested in joining. If so reply to my talk page and I'll get back to you as quick as I can. Thanks, Mr. Garrison Re: Salt Lake CityLooking over what was reverted:
I see your point on the excessive citation needed tags, but I'm not sure if this will pass FAC without a few more citations. The info that is too difficult to verify could just be removed, if it is not incredibly important. I get the impression that much of the info here was written before WP started requiring inline citations, so we have to dig them up now. Also, I have noticed that anons tend to add info without supporting citations, but when I add a request to verify it, the request is ignored. here is an explanation of a few of the citation needed tags:
Denver BroncosWhy did you take out ravens-broncos statistics? Sugar House areaStupid question completely unrelated to Wikipedia: I notice that on your user page you say you are from Sugar House, so I wonder if you could identify an area I drove through for drivers ed. IIRC the instructor called it Garden something or other, the road was pretty steep and twisty, all of the front yards were likewise steep, and there were a lot of trees. I think it is either in or near Sugar House, and was a pleasant enough drive that I'd like to find it again. --Lethargy 19:48, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
Taichung CityI am new on WikiProject Cities. I have added considerable content to the first city I am working on, which happens to be the city of my residence, Taichung City. Would you mind taking a few minutes to look it over and leave comments on how you think I can make it better to bring it up to WikiProject Cities standards in a section of the discussion page for the city’s article page that I have set up. Thank you. Ludahai 03:47, 17 October 2006 (UTC) Your edit to Wasatch RangeYour recent edit to Wasatch Range (diff) was reverted by an automated bot that attempts to recognize and repair vandalism to Wikipedia articles. If the bot reverted a legitimate edit, please accept my humble creator's apologies – if you bring it to the attention of the bot's owner, we may be able to improve its behavior. Click here for frequently asked questions about the bot and this warning. // AntiVandalBot 02:44, 22 October 2006 (UTC)
Questions/WikieducationHi, Bob rulz/Jason. I'm moabalan, new to Wikipedia and kind of stumbling around to learn the way things are done. I'm not even sure that I can contact you this way, so I'm going to quit now. If it looks like there will be communication, I'll go on. Okay. You removed a comment I made on the book, Hiking the Wasatch, after apparently the vandalism bot pointed it out. I see that some time ago, the bot earmarked one of your writings, but you note that "it wasn't vandalism." I'm new enough I don't know all that well what vandalism is, but I quickly read a wiki discussion that seemed to include the intent of purposefully inserting untrue info, or removing good info. It seems obvious that wiki is created to only allow things that someone, somewhere has put down in writing (no original research). Nothing creative, just cite the literature. I think I got that yesterday. I think it means I'm a hell of a lot less excited about Wiki than I was, because my creative writing means much to me, and Wikipedia isn't a place for everybody to opine about things, no matter how well founded the opinions. Let's go back to my note on Hiking the Wasatch. I don't make money from it. The author isn't my friend. I haven't met him. I think I can do a better job of keeping personal opinion out of what I write next. But there isn't a large body of published information about hiking in the Wasatch, and nobody has spent as much time as this author on the subject of hiking around Salt Lake City. Doesn't it serve a good purpose to point that out in an article on the Wasatch? Okay. Enough for now. I appreciate any response. Learning Wiki/advertisingMoabalan back again. Would be good if you read the "Questions" post below before this one. I just discovered my own talk page. I see that there's a note about advertising. Perhaps you put it there. I don't mind, but I haven't written anything here to promote my own work. I think that, especially in an encyclopedia built up bit by bit by amateurs, bibliographical information is very valuable. One can tell at a glance that Wiki doesn't tell us much about the Wasatch Mountains. Once I understand better what a stub is, I'll know whether to designate it as a stub. I once considered writing a book on these mountains; we could do well with a properly done article here that was at least three pages. One of the most useful things an article can do is to tell me where I can go to get better, longer treatment of the subject. Does Wikipedia have any specific policy on commenting on the content and value of the references we give? The bias appears to be against it, or is it just that people tend not to do it? Thanks. Moablan question threeWant to tell me why my next note didn't end up as regular text here? BroncosWhy do you feel only your story of the Broncos should be told? If someone already has a game posted, edit it for POV or errors, but why are you totally rewriting it? Utah State Route WikiProject (Again)?Shouldn't the UT SR WP be under your list of WikiProjects? I wanted to add that, but I wasn't sure if I was allowed to. Thanks - The RSJ ¿Qué? 00:35, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
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