User talk:Hephaestos/Archive20030407Hello there, welcome to the 'pedia! I hope you like the place and decide to stay. If you need any questions answered about the project then check out Wikipedia:Help or add a question to the Village pump. Cheers! --maveric149 Hi, thanks for the help on Johnson County War Fred Bauder Good to see you here Hephaestos. Wanna help with the LiveJournal article? -- Sam Francis Thanks for your improvements to the Hippie article. David 16:49 Sep 27, 2002 (UTC) Nice to see that someone other than me is finally doing more than a tiny bit of editing on Senser ;) I notice that you change a lot of British English style quotes to US English style (compare '"Hello", he said, "and welcome to WIkipedia".' with '"Hello," he said, "and welcome to Wikipedia."). Is this strictly necessary? Does WIkipedia have an 'official' version of English one way or the other? Just wondering, mainly because I think US style quotes are horrible and I'd really like to change it back to how it was ;) Have Fun --Lezek
I notice that you have taken an effort to merge sentences in the wiki source text into paragraphs. Copyedit and spelling correction are good services, but merging sentences is a disservice. Please understand that the web browsers merge all sentences into paragraphs automatically, so your effort makes no contribution to the appearance of the output. Simply compare this paragraph with the source text in the edit window and you would understand what I mean. On the contrary, when you merge individual sentences into a large blob of text, the revision history become less readable because the software may have a hard time to sync the identical portion to highlight the differences. The "diff"ing software may encounter performance problem when it fails to sync up the larger blobs of text. For example, when I wrote the vacuum flask cooking article initially, I purposely typed one sentence per line to enable better diff'ing in the revision history. When you merge all the lines into paragraphs, you ruin the intent of the original authors with no added benefit. Check the revision history of the vacuum flask cooking article to compare the changes among the revisions before your change to those after your change, you would notice the software fails to highlight the changes as precisely as before. What is done is done. It is pointless to revert the change because the revision history is already damaged. However, I urge you not to continue such practice. Thank you for your cooperation. --- Anon
Hey, thanks for helping us out on the LiveJournal article, and for the sound copy-edit at the Skid Row article. Just thought I'd stop by and say "hi." --asilvahalo Thanks for the intervention on Oxford University. I get quite uptight about wikipedia sometimes, and it was good that the voice of sanity made itself heard before I had time to produce another sarcastic response. Feel free to come between me and "Isis" anytime. Deb --- Hi. Take a look at [1] Mintguy The "Mad Anthony Wayne" was the name of a burger-joint I frequented in my younger days, so perhaps I'll have a go at its namesake's Rambot-forsaken towns<G>: I can't imagine how it missed Stony Point, NY, even >I< know where that is! -- Someone else 02:29 Dec 23, 2002 (UTC) Why have you removed the bulk of the text at Baby-farming, and replaced it with a stub? An explanation on the Talk:Baby-farming page (rather than here) would be appreciated. -- Bignose 2002-01-04 good catch on Cultural behavior but please check Culture theory which I think may be the same? Slrubenstein Excellent choice of scarlet over in maroon. Where would I find the palette of colours ? User:Two16 Hi, I made some changes to the Henry Ford page, including reorganization and headings, and I'd like to know what you think, Slrubenstein - To begin with, so you won't have to read the whole spiel, I think your edits to Henry Ford are quite good, especially in re-incorporating material which was there before and which should be there, but which I left out in a somewhat selfish attempt to end the edit war. This all started quite innocently, I swear. :) However, for good or ill you've given me an opening to go on at length about it, which I've been itching to do for some time. January 11, I was doing a spate of copyediting, which is mainly how I pass my Wikipedia time (although I've written a few articles, mostly of the non-controversial sort). Came across Ford Motor Company, as I recall upon a search for the misspelling "independant." Fixed some copy and noticed as I was going along that a lot of the article had to do with Ford the man and not Ford the company. Went and looked at Henry Ford and noticed, likewise, a substantial amount having to do with Ford the company as opposed to Ford the man. Resolved to fix the mess; did so on January 12. Thought that would be the end of it. Not so! My first real "edit war" (hopefully my last for a long while, as I mentioned I'm not overly fond of controversy—generally I have been coming to Wikipedia as an escape from controversy). At first I was at a bit of a loss as to where Clutch's motivation for the whitewashing of this article came from (I initially pictured him as a strong U.S. patriot with an affinity for the history of the automobile). And I think it's true that, on a byte-for-byte basis, the article on Henry Ford as originally I left it overemphasized his antisemitism at the expense of glossing over his contributions to the automotive field (although I had envisioned the future of the article as being one of people fleshing out the positive, not censoring the negative). As the discussion in Talk:Henry_Ford wore on, and as Clutch came up with such gems as "Ford did not repudiate his statements" and (my personal favorite, which gave me a belly-laugh) "none of Ford's descendants worthy of their own encyclopedia articles at this point in time," it dawned on me that this person has not even the most rudimentary grasp of the subject matter. It puzzled me; why, then, was he editing the article at all? So I had a look at his user contributions, and all became clear. It's interesting to me that in a search for the word "antisemite," it would appear from the current version of Wikipedia that there were only two in history: Henry Ford and Hermann Goedsche (and frankly I'm surprised "Sir John" is still there, as Clutch has no few edits on the Protocols article as well). Clearly this is not accurate. That Henry Ford and others were and are antisemites is fact, not a matter of point-of-view. Unfortunately, as borne out in Talk:Henry_Ford, Clutch and probably some substantial few others have a fixed and skewed view of the term which is not current or even borne out by a dictionary. In my view, Ford's well-nigh-rabid antisemitism (I'm guessing springing in no small part from his perception that the "Jews controlled the labor unions," which he loathed from a business perspective) is part of what makes the life of Henry Ford interesting. His zeal in evangelizing these beliefs, while flying in the face of Ford as an "American icon," is also a telling example of the sheer energy the man had. This dichotomy is part of what makes him a fascinating biographical subject. (As I've been writing this, though, I've seen some "Ford Motor Company" material start to creep back in, so I may be back to that article later. *grin*)—Hephaestos 01:42 Feb 12, 2003 (UTC)
If you are bored, check out Richard Wagner and the talk page... Slrubenstein
Hi Hep, I don't think changing the word 'with' to 'on' on the [UN . . . Iraq] page solves the problem. on and with are both used, the former by anti-war people, the latter by pro-war people. So we have just moved one POV and replaced it for another. I've another suggestion: instead call it ' The UN Security Council and the proposed Iraq war'. That way you avoid any hint of bias, by all words that could be seen as in any way expressing a POV and instead calling it a term that all sides would be able to use: the Proposed Iraq War. What do you think? JTD 00:35 Feb 22, 2003 (UTC)
Erm, just wondering... Is there any special reason for removing the full stops from names with "St." in them? They seem to be a useful way of indicating abbreviations, to me. And in any case, at least some of the Oxford colleges that you've removed them from have their names given with full stops on their official webpages, so doesn't that make the full stops official, too...? -- Oliver P. 19:58 Feb 24, 2003 (UTC)
Hi, Hephaestos - thanks for the welcome. I'm already addicted, and typing/recollecting so fast that I'm giving myself an ice-cream headache :) I'm baffled by my display problem too. The tan talk pages show up fine on my $135 ViewSonic, but no amount of twiddling can get my $500 Radius flatscreen to behave. It isn't just OmniWeb, but all the OS X browsers I have. Of course, I get sick of OS X monitor calibration (tediousness exemplified), but my brother the photographer says no matter how easy on the eyes the flat screen is, the CRT monitor is inherently better at displaying colors. Ortolan88 18:56 Mar 5, 2003 (UTC) Hi Hephaestos, you just added a "width=400" clause to the image on Brisbane, Queensland. I have had admins come along after me and take these out. Can you point me to any prior discussions on this subject? - Gaz 04:49 Mar 7, 2003 (UTC)
OK, I understand your problem. The downside of making the width explicit is that if a new version of the image is uploaded, and the size changes, then it will also render poorly. I suppose the onus should be on the uploader to check all links to any image he/she uploads and adjust the page if necessary. I was originally including the "width=nnn" tag when I did my uploads, then Admin mav came along, shrunk the image and removed the tag. I will be using the tags in future. I know the Dominoes image is a little large. I will be uploading a slightly smaller one soon (320x240). Do you like my pics? - Gaz 05:36 Mar 7, 2003 (UTC)
I'm starting to do this now, usually where the image has some artistic worth (my image, my opinion) or the reader would need the larger image to see finer detail. Look at Story Bridge, Brisbane - Gaz 03:34 Mar 19, 2003 (UTC) Thanks for tag teaming me on the 12.246.100.201 reverts. Salsa Shark 06:01 Mar 19, 2003 (UTC) Thanks for wikifying my stub article, Slogan:Power_to_the_people. I take it you like the convention of sticking the word Slogan at the beginning of the title. (BTW, nice LiveJournal -- I copied the bouncing kittycat image). --Uncle Ed 19:19 Mar 19, 2003 (UTC)
The only namespaces I know of are "Wikipedia:" and "User:" -- everything else goes in the plain old article namespace. (Technically, the talk articles occupy their own namespace as well, but let's not get too technical...) I took the happy kitty, of course. ^_^ --Uncle Ed Thanks for the picture of the 5p. Have you got any pictures of other current UK coins? With a bit of luck I'll do the articles for all the current ones this weekend. -- Arwel 23:51 Mar 22, 2003 (UTC) Why did you move Patrice MacMahon, duc de Magenta?
I have reverted the page for the present. If and when some agreement is reached on how to deal with the issue, the page can be moved if necessary. But wait until people have reached a decision, especially when all sides were opposed to what you suggested. STÓD/ÉÍRE 02:30 Mar 24, 2003 (UTC) Hi Hephaestos. Are there browsers that have problems with <div> tags that contain images without widths? I'm asking because I see you keep adding widths to the divs. That makes it more difficult for a user (like me) who wants to update an image, because now I've got to go check every page that links to it and make sure that there isn't a width, or change the width if there is one. Anyhow, I'm curious as to why you think this change makes things better. -º¡º
The trouble with leaving out width is that the picture then moves to different locations on the page, depending on which browser is used. (I had a sharp row with someone re the way they were laying out images, only to find that what their browser told them they were doing, and what my browser told me they were doing, were completely different. It became like a perverse game of table tennis, as we each corrected each other's mistake, only to find that what was right on mine was hideous on his, and what was right on his was god-damned awful on mine. It was only when the width command was restored that we actually were able to place the picture in the same spot and both see it there. I've begun doing is downloading images onto iPhoto (which i have on my eMac). It tells me exactly what the borders are so I then quote the numbers directly into the box and everything fits to a T. But not everyone has iPhoto. BTW, a lot of people are putting images on without specifying a space around the text. The result is that the writing does right up to the image and looks . . . euch! I've spent tonight changing that. Brion came up with a varied list of commands to be used when putting in pictures. It is on the Robert Mugabe page and seems to work perfectly. The only issue is the test and see (or use iPhoto) in guessing the image width. STÓD/ÉÍRE 22:02 Apr 3, 2003 (UTC)
Hi!
I think it's polite to explain why I changed your picture of the Thunderbirds (squadron). I obviously had no need to change the pic you used (it was an excellent view) but when I went to the USAF site and collected the pic afresh, the bigger version was clearly blurred so I had no choice but to change it completely. I think the reader likes an enlarged pic available so that's why I always do a 750 pixel wide bigger version and a 250 pixel wide thumbnail. I hope my changes can stay but if you are unhappy I will immediately revert for you. As an aside, I have no way of checking how my pics work in different browsers (I have IE5) so any comment on that would be welcome. -- Adrian Pingstone 13:14 Apr 4, 2003 (UTC)
Thank you very much for the input. That was very polite, although not strictly necessary; in the tradition of Wikipedia I'm reminded it's really not up to any one person what happens to a page once it's up, it's free for anyone to change as they see fit. That said, I really do like the picture you chose better than the earlier one, because yours shows the Thunderbird logo on the bottom of the planes, which is something that was originally missing. I also like the idea of linking to a larger version, and wish I'd thought of it myself. :) One thing I have read here, though (and I forget where, unfortunately) is that css-style div tags seem to be preferred by most Wikipedians over table tags (which threw me a bit when I first started, as I was more used to tables). If you remember where the discussions were about picture framing problems I'd like to go take a look at them and try to get a better feel for it. I did make a couple of minor tweaks, hopefully it won't screw up others' browsers, but if it does hopefully they'll step in and fix it. As I mention to STÓD/ÉÍRE above, this kind of back-and-forth usually has an end result of something that's acceptable to everybody. Hephaestos 18:47 Apr 4, 2003 (UTC)
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