I suggest we trawl through Portal space and list all portals and their related sub-pages here. Sub pages which have no incoming links should be so noted. Pages should be categorised in the appropriate portal category, for example pages related to Portal:Comics should be placed in Category:Comics portal. Where a category doesn't exist, I'd say create it and we can always list it for deletion later if so decided. Hidingtalk11:15, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
Keep in mind that any portal with, say, a "Selected anniversaries" section is likely to have hundreds of subpages. Are all of them going to need category tags? Kirill Lokshin14:21, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
Purpose of the project?
In my experience, the stub sorting project maintains fairly rigid guidelines for stub templates/categories/creation/etc., and tends to remove anything they don't like in short order. Is it the intent of this project to enforce a particular structure on portals themselves? Or merely to keep them organized, with the traditional wide latitude given to individual portal maintainers? Kirill Lokshin13:06, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
To my mind mainly to make sure we don't get half created portals hanging about the portal space, for example Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Portal:Family Guy and Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Portal:South Park. I would rather see it used as a talking shop for portal maintainers, for sharing what does and doesn't work, and for generating consensus on contentious issues regarding portals such as the recent discussion over using the term "Featured" in portals. Your question just seems so broad that it is impossible to answer, to be honest. Do you have any specific examples in mind? I mean, to my eye there seems to be a standard look for a portal, namely the boxes. I'd also, from my point of view, like to see better linking between related portals, for example I maintain Portal:Comics and had been relatively unaware of Portal:Anime and manga; it makes sense we both link to each other. So I'm not looking to impose top down rigid guidelines over every single aspect of a portal, but areas such as linking up related portals, shared templates such as {{Portals}}, discussing unmaintained portals and keeping the portal space maintained are things it would make sense discussing in one area. Does that help? I'm not typically one for advocating the removal of something in no short order, I'd rather this were a discussion forum. Hidingtalk09:02, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
There are quite a few portals in Category:Portals and some of the subcategories that are not ready for general viewing. It's hard to sort them out other than by using Portal:Browse. I suggest adding a Category:Portals under construction subcategory to Category:Portals and recategorizing the incomplete portals there. Also, Template:box portal skeleton should categorize templates to Category:Portals under construction instead of Category:Portals and instructions should be added at Wikipedia:Portal#How to create a new portal for recategorizing a portal once it is ready. Also, these instructions should be expanded to discuss adding completed and polished portals to Portal:Browse.
Well, a rough guess after having just gone through almost all the portals fixing a formatting problem caused by a bug in {{box portal skeleton}}, I would say at least 20%, perhaps more. That's out of roughly 200 portals, so at least 40 are incomplete. —Doug Belltalk•contrib18:41, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
In the interest of being bold I'm going to take these two encouraging replies with no cautionary replies as consensus. Basically, I think it's needed, so I was mostly looking to see if there were objections. —Doug Belltalk•contrib22:40, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
Mostly done, some portals were borderline
I finished the above recommendations and recategorized all of the portals except those in the Category:Portal:Geography subcategory (I'll do that tomorrow).
My criteria for recatergorizing a portal was:
Any redlinks for content sections (but not simply for a red link within the content)
And finally, Portal:Classical Civilisation seemed to have all the content, but the formatting was so corrupted that it was unusable, so I moved it to Portals under construction. (If I have time, which isn't looking good the next few days, I will try to fix it.)
I see it as separate. Portals under construction is intended to be instead ofCategory:Portals. I think Portals needing attention could be used in addition toPortals. In fact, it would be a great place to put those portals I listed above that are missing content, or just lacking enough content. I would make it a subcategory to Portals instead of a subcategory to Portals under construction. —Doug Belltalk•contrib21:58, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
Okay. I just went through the portal space and categorised all the main portal pages in either portals or portals under constructions. There were quite a few uncategorised. My next thought is, should each portal have its own category into which its subpages are categorised? On top of that, there's a lot of redirects in portal space, I might make a list of them somewhere to keep an eye on them. Hidingtalk23:02, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
should each portal have its own category into which its subpages are categorised? A couple (like three or four) portals have done this. I don't know if it's really necessary because the "what links here" will reveal them all, but I don't have a strong opinion. However, I do have a strong opinion that if a portal has such a category, that the category is not a subcategory in the Category:Portals hierarchy. You can locate the subpage category easily enough at the bottom of the associated portal page. —Doug Belltalk•contrib23:25, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
Could you elaborate? Do you disagree about having the categories, or about including them in the Category:Portals hierarchy? As far as the Portals hierarchy, I don't see the point in "polluting" it with a huge number of categories that basically contain the pieces used to make the main portal page. These pieces are better located from the main page than through the category hierarchy, which, at least to me, has the purpose of finding the portals. But maybe that wasn't where you disagree... —Doug Belltalk•contrib18:46, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
I disagree with not folding them into Category:Portals. Unless you are arguing to remove all subcats of Category:Portals apart from under construction and needing attention? At the minute, the way the geopgraphy portals are categorised it makes it hard not to put the Portal categories into cat:portals. And if geography portals are categorised like so, it makes sense to categorise all the other portals likewise. Although, a way around it would be to categorise subpages in Category:Portal Comics sub-pages. Thoughts? My end goal here is just to keep an eye on all these subpages and make sure we haven't got unneeded pages kicking about. Hidingtalk13:28, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
The naming convention I've seen used is Category:Comics portal (wow, I expected this to be a red link). I would create a category for each portal. The reason I don't want to include these portal categories themselves in the Category:Portal hierarchy is because these categories will drawf in number the categories that are organizing the hierarchy. Also, these categories are not useful for browsing, they are useful for editing the page. Because of this, I find it adequate to just locate the category off, in this case, the Portal:Comics page. We could have a category like Category:Portal page categories or Category:Portal sub-pages or whatever is best, but I'm not sway that this would be all that useful. —Doug Belltalk•contrib22:00, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
I don't see why individual portals need categories. All subpages should be accessible from the portal, and if not, from What links here.--cj | talk06:34, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
Listing for deletion?
I'm working up a list of pages in the portal namespace which I think might warrant a listing at MfD. So far I have:
No need to even bother with that. I've deleted it. Taking the common sense approach, I see no reason why every else in that list can't be deleted right now. Agreed?--cj | talk10:54, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
It seems to be fairly well constructed, actually. While I'm surprised that there are enough UT-related articles to make this possible, we shouldn't judge portals solely on their scope. Kirill Lokshin02:31, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
It hasn't been accepted as a guideline yet, though; and even if it is, it wouldn't really qualify as a sufficient reason to delete things. Kirill Lokshin02:55, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
Well, there's obviously more than one article on this topic (otherwise, it wouldn't really be possible to create even a rudimentary portal). If your complaint is that there are too many articles on the University of Texas, that's a rather different issue, and one quite beyond the scope of this discussion ;-) Kirill Lokshin03:10, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
The only exception to judging a portal by its scope would be importance of the topic it covers. This portal, to me at least, clearly fails on both counts - it is seriously limited in scope and it isn't important. I mean, this isn't even a university portal - its a portal for a branch of a university! In my opinion Portal:University is where the buck should stop. That schools are allowed articles is already a point of resentment; this portal sets a precedent to allow portals for schools! What happened to broad subject areas?--cj | talk05:08, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
I have personal reasons for wanting this portal deleted, but if I wasn't an OU alumnus, I wouldn't see much of a problem with it. It looks fairly useful and well-stocked, even if it's color scheme is hideous; it looks like a single university can be a broad enough topic to fill out a portal.--ragesoss05:57, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
I still don't see why we should be judging scope at all, except insofar as portals with a narrow scope usually have trouble in other areas as well. Let's not drag portal-space into the eternal "notability" debate if we can help it. Kirill Lokshin14:00, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
I'm afraid they've alway been a part of it - like it or not. The reason we consider scope is because portals are unique: just because an article or series of articles might be justified for a topic, it doesn't mean a portal is. Why? Because portals are like the Main Page, encompassing wide areas and serving as entry-points to them - that is, redirecting users to a multitude of articles. Portals are drawpoints in themselves - they are a fronts for Wikipedia. Just like Portal:Architecture which was recently reviewed by a prominent web network as one of the top 10 best planning, design, and development websites.--cj | talk14:49, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
But what does "justified" mean here? I could see your point if all portals were listed on the main page and there was competition for screen real estate; but most portals will only be found by people actively searching for them. They may not be useful to very many readers, but some will find them useful; and I really can't see what the harm is in the existence of well-maintained portals—even if they are narrower in scope than one might expect. Kirill Lokshin15:07, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
I've been looking at the links from cricket articles to the cricket portal. It seems we have no consistency about how to do this. I count several different styles:
Link at the top of the article, like a dab link. This is the most common style. The links can be:
Is there a standard for this? Myself, I don't like the dab link. I may be influenced by the fact that I'm not a big fan of portals (dare I admit such heresy here? I accept I'm probably in the minority on that), but it feels a bit spammy to me. Do we really need to trumpet the portal at the top of the article? I also don't like "overloading" the space used for dab links: it's confusing to use the space for different purposes, and it causes problems when we need a dab link as well.13,14. So that's my least favourite way.
The box in the top-right hand corner still feels spammy to me, I'm afraid. It's as if portals are somehow being regarded as superior to other methods of browsing Wikipedia, so deserve special treatment. I'd be happier to have more links to the portal if it was less prominent. And also that space is often in use with a photo, or in the case of cricket articles with a biographical infobox15, so what do you do then? Stephen Turner (Talk) 12:06, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
Yes, anything in the top of pages is spammy. Isn't meta information supposed to be only on the talk page? But portals are only semi-meta? I believe the "see also"-section is the best place to put it. --Boivie12:44, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
The dab link option is thoroughly inappropriate. That was an option undertaken only by Portal:Cricket (principally by jguk) prior to the creation of the portalpar templates, and has unfortunately stuck and recently extended. I have been removing them where I come across it. Text links in see also are also a bad option (and one I had not encountered). Both {{portalpar}} and {{portal}} are the standard format, but they are inconsistently implemented. A discussion earlier this year at Wikipedia talk:Portal established a consensus that they should be located at article ends, preferably in the See also section. Linking from navigational templates and infoboxes seems okay so long as it is done discreetly; in fact, someone has suggested that country portals be linked to from the Infobox Country.
I think that a better way to integrate portals with articles needs to be found. Also, which articles should link to particular portals needs to be addressed. I am open to the idea of an icon in the title bar, similar to {{featured article}}, as a way to access portals. The only problem with this is that the title bar is increasingly occupied by other things including co-ordinates. --cj | talk12:52, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
Well somewhere near the end of the article (where =See also= would otherwise be) but above ext links and refs (assuming they're there), cause it really is a see also type of thing we're talking about. -- Ian ≡ talk14:07, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
I'm more inclined to use {{portal}}/{{portalpar}} near the top of the portal's main topic article (and not on other articles that are related to the portal's main topic) and a See also type text link on appropriate WikiProject pages. The portals are already linked from the main page and through Portal:Browse; I don't see as much of a need to advertise them around on all related articles. Slambo(Speak)13:59, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
In the case of almost all (and presumably eventually all) cricketer articles, putting {{portal}}/{{portalpar}} near the top of the article will interfere with the infobox which is also in the top right hand corner. -- Ian ≡ talk05:31, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
I've refactored this discussion slightly as two separate issues have developed. I hope that's OK -- Ian ≡ talk05:27, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
...(copied from above) The portals are already linked from the main page and through Portal:Browse; I don't see as much of a need to advertise them around on all related articles. Slambo(Speak)13:59, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
Yes, where to stop is another issue. We have something over 3000 cricket biographies, before you've even thought about other articles. Should they all link to the portal? If not, which ones should? At the moment, it's all rather haphazard. Many of the most prominent articles do, but many non-prominent articles do too, depending presumably what the original author copied. Stephen Turner (Talk) 14:50, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
I asked Ianbrown about why some articles have this or not, and he said ([1]) that showcase articles on the portal should link to this portal - I was wondering whether I should spam articles with the portal links to two that I had created, (Portal:Eurovision and Portal:Swimming) because it could possibly considered bad form wrt vanispamcruftadvertising portals which I had created. So I proceeeded to advertise the portal on the showcase articles. I'm fine with whatever is decided - formatting, obtrusiveness, etc. ßlηguγɛη | Have your say!!!01:12, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
Showcased article linking is a good suggestion. Outside that, I figure the main article, for example, Cricket for Portal:Cricket and so on, should link to the portal, and maybe top level categories in the related category should link to it, so all the cats in Category:Cricket. That seems like a fairly good list of places which should link. To sum up:
Okay, I wasn't thinking about talk page links, just links in the main article space. For items that I put in the Portal:Trains#Did you know section, I put {{Trains portal/DYK date|(the date it appeared there)}} on the talk page, so I guess putting a link on the talk page for portal features is appropriate. However, I think putting such a link on the article itself isn't appropriate, especially when you consider that many of the Did you know features are stubs. Slambo(Speak)15:20, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
I think that all related articles related to a portal are eleigible to be linked. It improves the functionality of wikipedia. If you have an interest in a topic, you will naturally want to look at thta portal. --evrik19:21, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
In my opinion, selected articles for a portal should not link to the portal. Only one significant article in the article namespace should link to any given portal (there are probably exceptions where two or three articles might link). I think it's also acceptable for "Current events in xxx" to link to a related portal, and maybe some redirects. All links from the article namespace are only valid if the portal will contain relevant material to the original article indefinitely. As an example, Portal:Oceania covers more than two dozen countries, but Oceania is the only mainspace article other than current events articles, "Oceania portal", and "P:O" to link to it, and I think the archives of Current events in Oceania might benefit from having the link removed.-gadfium05:57, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
Fair Use Images
There doesn't seem to be a policy on this and the official policy doesn't even mention portals. I've seen some editors not allow any fair use images while otheres let any image go on the portal. Thats why I propose that this project make a policy on it. Aren't portals the same thing as the main Wikipedia page. If so shouldn't portals follow that policy of allowing fair use images only in news articles/selected images only if their is corresponding text and an article and only if their is no other image to be used. Jedi6-(need help?)00:17, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
Portals are not the same thing as the Main page. Policies differ from portal to portal, but most have selected articles that are not Featured articles and selected pictures that are not Featured pictures. To demand that they adhere to the same standards as the main page would be to demand that they recycle the very small number of featured articles and pictures that are relevant to each over and over, or that they not have such selections. It was rightly objected to that portals initially called their selections "featured", as that devalues the word.
For a portal's "In The News" or "Did You Know" sections, I feel a fair use picture is okay, because it is illustrating an item directly relevant to that picture. For a selected picture, I feel it is not okay, since the picture is the focus rather than the writeup that goes with it. Also, perhaps more importantly, a selected picture should show off Wikipedia's content for the given area, and fair use pictures are not our content.
I'm agreeing with Jedi6 here about fair use images being allowed in suitable context on portal pages, but I think I'm approaching this from a different direction.-gadfium02:00, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
A bunch of subpages of Portal:Trains were edited today by Ed g2s (talk·contribs) to remove all the company logos reasoning that fair use is strictly forbidden outside of the main article space. I don't entirely agree with this but I'm not going to start reverting things yet. Slambo(Speak)13:27, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
I do think it is ridiculous to straight-out prohibit fair use images in portalspace. Should we make it an aim of this project to ammend the fair use policy to allow fair use images in portalspace where appropriate; the convention the Main Page goes by seems valid.--cj | talk04:53, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
I agree. Portal space should be treated like article space in this regard. Certainly, the case for that being standard fair use is clearcut; it's no different than in an article.--ragesoss05:22, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
It doesn't appear to be a flat-out campaign to prohibit them yet; if it was, I would have seen quite a few more edits pop up on my watchlist last week. It was my understanding that portals were basically special types of articles, and as long as the text next to an image directly discusses the subject of the image (like a news or anniversary item about a specific company with an image of that company's logo when no other images are available), it would qualify as a fair use of the image. I hate to fall back on the flag images for all of the news items. Slambo(Speak)10:46, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
I think a straw poll at a centralised area is probably the best idea to determine the consensus on this issue; it's a contentious one for sure. HidingTalk11:12, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
Formatting Help
There are some image formatting issues that I just discovered on Portal:History of science as well a number the main portals. In Internet Explorer, many images don't show up, while other appear at the bottom of the page or misplaced in some other way. Any help sorting this out would be appreciated.--ragesoss21:27, 7 May 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps it could serve as an opportunity to make clear general standards for portals. This would allow as to determine what is "sub-standard".--cj | talk05:00, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
References on portals?
In working through some updates to the anniversaries section of Portal:Trains, the thought struck me that there really isn't any reason that I can think of to hide the references on the portal page. Using the <ref> structure and including such tags within the transcluded pages, it's trivial to create a section at the bottom of the page with <references /> where they are displayed. What are other editors' thoughts on including a References section at the bottom of a portal to list all the refs for facts currently on the portal? Slambo(Speak)13:35, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
Okay, I just tried it with the current portal setup and it didn't quite work as easily as I had hoped. I think the problem is that the <ref> tags are all on transcluded pages. It seems that the parser goes through searching for references at a different point than I thought it would. Slambo(Speak)15:11, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
I'm not sure if it's a good idea from a design standpoint, in any case. We don't have footnotes directly on the main page, for example; all of the references are supposed to be in the linked articles. Is there any reason for portals to be fundamentally different in this regard? Kirill Lokshin15:53, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
Page segments.
The talk page for Portal:Music does not allow for editing specific sections. Is there a way to fix this issue, so that there is an alternative method of responding to a given section without using the 'edit this page' feature? --Folajimi23:55, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
Fixed it. The example box of anniversaries transcluded the box-header template, which has no-edit and no-table-of-contents markup embedded in it. Though for some reason, substituting in the content broke the anniversaries box boarder.--ragesoss00:15, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
Medicine portal
I'm the maintainer of that portal which is a featured candidate now. I've changed to currentyear-currentweek system in featured articles, pictures. But the edit button of the box (obviously) points to the original template (portal:medicine/selected article for example). How should I solve it to point to portal:medicine/selected article/22/ 2006? Thanks. NCursework10:49, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
The edit link in the template needed to use the same currentweek-currentyear syntax as the content transclusion itself. I've fixed it for you. Hope that helps! Kirill Lokshin13:57, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
Hi. I am trying to make the Latin America portal better, and so wanted the related portals to be a band all the way across the bottom of the page. Instead, the box seems to be stuck on the right side, causing a serious problem in formatting. Does anyone have any suggestions of how to make my idea work? Estrellador*21:43, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
Related to the discussion of the proposal process, I think an effort is needed to go through what's currently in the portal namespace, evaluate the portals (similar to Wikipedia:Version 0.5), identify what portals are in need of major attention, and develop a course of action. In some cases, portals are in such bad shape ("D-Class") with the topics too narrow, that they should be put up for WP:MFD. In other cases, the topic is sufficiently broad that a call could be made to relevant WikiProjects and editors to help. I see other portals that fit "A-Class" (almost featured status), "B-Class" (regularly/periodically maintained), and "C-Class" (needs significant work). To that end, I have created Wikipedia:WikiProject Portals/Status to begin doing this. I originally planned to visit each portal, personally, but find it's daunting and think this would work better with many people helping. The decision of assigning a particular class is quite subjective, but generally fits the characteristics I have listed at the top of the page. I also think portals should be revisited periodically and by different users. If anyone has suggestions, ideas, or thoughts about this, please weigh in. --Aude (talkcontribs) 18:15, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
One outcome of this effort could be an outreach campaign to Wikipedians, to attract more people to help with the various portals. This could include writing something for Signpost. --Aude (talkcontribs) 18:20, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
I disagree. First, the discussion above was vague, non-binding, and very exclusive. The Philadelphia wikiproject people have been active in trying to promote Philadelphia-realted articles. I think the little cabal on this page should sit on their hands and let people work on the articles.
Pretzel, Hoagie, and Fat Albert all are categorized with Phaildelphia related cat's and mention Philadelphia in their articles. EurekaLott, I always assume good faith, otherwise I would think you're being retaliatory because your edits to those three articles were reversed.
I spent a fair amount of time looking at the guidelines this morning. There are no guidelines as to the use of {{portalpar}}. Did I miss it? When I looked at Template:Portalpar I saw the following, "Use: This template is used to link an article to its related portal." Could you please cite what policy you ar referencing? --evrik16:15, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
A Portal created recently by Mallimak (talk·contribs) - the Orkney Portal - has been nominated for deletion. If you wish to take part in the discussion please contribute at:
Yes, please do attend to the discussion. It has been sidetracked from the fact Portal:Orkney ought not to exist by a dispute between users. Please assess the portal on its merits (which I venture to suggest are non-existant) and contribute your position. Thanks, --cj | talk14:01, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
I've seen a few "pseudo" randomized portal component at Portal:Military of the United States, Portal:Numismatics, Portal:War, and Portal:Texas. (By "component, I meant things like "Selected article" or "Selected biography"). The randomness is actually based on the current time, which IMHO is good enough for this application. The code looks like
{{/box-header|''Selected pictures''|Portal:Military of the United States/Selected picture/{{#ifexpr:({{CURRENTTIMESTAMP}} mod 22) >= 0 | {{#expr:({{CURRENTTIMESTAMP}} mod 22) + 1}} | {{#expr:-({{CURRENTTIMESTAMP}} mod 22) + 1}} }}|}}
{{Portal:Military of the United States/Selected picture/{{#ifexpr:({{CURRENTTIMESTAMP}} mod 22) >= 0 | {{#expr:({{CURRENTTIMESTAMP}} mod 22) + 1}} | {{#expr:-({{CURRENTTIMESTAMP}} mod 22) + 1}} }}}}
{{/box-footer|[[Portal:Military of the United States/Selected picture|More pictures...]]}}
I am thinking about turning that into a template. Something like
But before being bold, I'd like to ask you if you have seen anything like this or any talk about that. I just want to avoid duplication of effort or having two or more competing templates that do the same thing. --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 10:13, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
I've not noticed any relevant discussion elsewhere. I think it would be a worthwhile contribution.--cj | talk04:23, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
I've added the type of randomization CBDunkerson has at Wikipedia:Featured content/Portals to Cats, Dogs, Psychology, and the List. The one "drawback" I've noticed is that when two or more sections are "randomized," they stay in sync, so I used combination sets for the low frequency sections to mix things up a bit more. A template with a "seed" parameter would be nice for situations like that. Rfrisbietalk20:54, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
It works great, thanks! To give it more flexibility for different portal designs, I made the footer text optional. I also added an option to change the seed value to allow different results on the same page. Rfrisbietalk18:16, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
Since enabling the use of fair use images in portalspace is one of the goals of this project, I also encourage members to consider the amendment.--cj | talk00:42, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
hi, there's been some discussion lately about what how the content in Portal:Space exploration and Portal:Spaceflight should be divided and organized (see their talk pages). It's been suggested that Portal:Space technology be created, but it is far from clear how do divide content between the three, and whether or not all three should exist. If anyone has ideas, your comments would be welcome (here). Mlm4216:18, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
I'm of the opinion that portals with broader scope are more useful than specialised portals. Thusly, I would suggest that the discussion should be ultimately geared towards converging the three existing portals.--cj | talk03:58, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
Yes, they should definintely be merged. One really great portal with a lot of content is much better than three average (or in the case of Space, below average) portals. "Space" sort of implies spaceflight and exploration, as opposed to astronomy, so I think Space would be a good choice for the final destination of the content from the other two.--ragesoss13:51, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
Hmm.. i think one of the reasons they were created separately may have been so that they nicely fit as subportals to Portal:Transport and Portal:Technology.. a portal titled Space hardly seems appropriate as a subportal of either of those.. Mlm4216:59, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
Hello. The WikiProject Council has recently updated the Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Directory. This new directory includes a variety of categories and subcategories which will, with luck, potentially draw new members to the projects who are interested in those specific subjects. Please review the directory and make any changes to the entries for your project that you see fit. There is also a directory of portals, at User:B2T2/Portal, listing all the existing portals. Feel free to add any of them to the portals or comments section of your entries in the directory. The three columns regarding assessment, peer review, and collaboration are included in the directory for both the use of the projects themselves and for that of others. Having such departments will allow a project to more quickly and easily identify its most important articles and its articles in greatest need of improvement. If you have not already done so, please consider whether your project would benefit from having departments which deal in these matters. It is my hope that all the changes to the directory can be finished by the first of next month. Please feel free to make any changes you see fit to the entries for your project before then. If you should have any questions regarding this matter, please do not hesitate to contact me. Thank you. B2T214:12, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
Hello, I'm Dfrg.msc, and I want to make some constructive edits to Wikipedia. It's not that I am unable to, I would just like some guidance. So, if you have any specific tasks related to this topic, please inform me on my talk page, be specific and include links and I'll help out as soon as I can. Thanks, Dfrg.msc1 . 2 . 307:10, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
Cats 'n Dogs living together!
If anyone can offer some tips on the respective portal talk pages about how to improve Cats 'n Dogs up to "featured" quality, it would be greatly appreciated. Thanks. Rfrisbietalk00:44, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
portal tabs
Has any portal tried using Tabs at the top of the portal for easy navigation, as in de:Portal:Raumfahrt (German Spaceflight portal), or de:Portal:Bahn (German Trains portal)? it seems like a useful idea.. but would it break too much from the seemly standardized style of most portals here? Mlm4215:43, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
I've seen the tabs on Portal:Bahn as I look into translating items from it for Portal:Trains. I haven't tried implementing them on P:T yet mostly because I haven't seen as much of a need for information that isn't already covered on the current portal. Slambo(Speak)19:56, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
Its possible to have a system so that every week or every month a new article is selected from a pre-determined list (as it were) but is there a way so that the article will stay there for two weeks. A month seems a bit too long and week might be a bit short, it is all down to the variables like CURRENTMONTH and such but is there something like CURRENTFORTNIGHT or something along those lines. I just don't want to run out of good articles too soon. Chris_huhtalk15:13, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
You could use the modulo function of {{#expr:}} to see if the current week number is even and rotate based on that. For example, the code could go something like this:
I've recently made some major changes to the above portal, and I don't think it would take much work to get it to featured status. If anyone could offer us some pointers and check if we're going in the right direction, that'd be great. I'm watching Portal talk:Chemistry. Cheers, riana_dzasta05:21, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
Here's a question. Are hide/show boxes in portal sections "okay"? In particular, would they be okay for a "featured" portal? Rfrisbietalk17:28, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
It would depend on which sections are being hidden (ie, content should always be visible), but in general I would say it's a Bad Idea. I think there's a potential with nifty features like this to confuse visitors, some of whom may not be tech-savvy.--cj | talk03:00, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
'In the News' sections
I have a question - is it OK to provide links to news on external sites, or should links be limited to Wikipedia and/or sister projects? Feel free to tell me if this is a really daft question :) Thanks, riana_dzasta07:06, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
With In The News sections, I find it best to followed a slightly modified version of the format used on the Main Page. This requires that all stories are first posted on related Current events pages, and removes the need for external links in the portal section – which can often be unsightly. I've introduced this standard to Portal:Australia, Portal:New Zealand, Portal:Oceania, Portal:United States and Portal:Indonesia (though the links have found their way back on to the latter two). The advantage of this approach is that it retains focus on our own articles, instead of directing the readership away from Wikipedia.--cj | talk09:22, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
Collaborations on Portals?
Given that there are a lot of portals which deal with the same basic subject areas (Science, Religion, some countries, some sports, what have you), what would the people here think of trying to maybe get a collaborative effort together to have a group of people collectively maintain the portals for a given subject area? It would probably be more work for those individuals, but it would probably also increase the quality of a lot of the portals involved. Badbilltucker20:04, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
New template
I just checked in {{PortalPastSel}}. This template can be used to create the "Recently selected" links at the bottom of a portal's "Selected foo" sections. For example, the code:
The template expects the link code to be located at [[Portal:portalname/Selected type/Week week, year/link]].
I initially started developing it to simplify the links on the Selected article and Selected picture sections of Portal:Trains, but thought other portals might find it useful too so I generalized the portal name parameter too. I'm currently using this template in the new 2007 image archive pages for P:Trains, and I plan to go back through the portal archives to simplify the code on those pages too. Slambo(Speak)14:58, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
Wikipedia Day Awards
Hello, all. It was initially my hope to try to have this done as part of Esperanza's proposal for an appreciation week to end on Wikipedia Day, January 15. However, several people have once again proposed the entirety of Esperanza for deletion, so that might not work. It was the intention of the Appreciation Week proposal to set aside a given time when the various individuals who have made significant, valuable contributions to the encyclopedia would be recognized and honored. I believe that, with some effort, this could still be done. My proposal is to, with luck, try to organize the various WikiProjects and other entities of wikipedia to take part in a larger celebrartion of its contributors to take place in January, probably beginning January 15, 2007. I have created yet another new subpage for myself (a weakness of mine, I'm afraid) at User talk:Badbilltucker/Appreciation Week where I would greatly appreciate any indications from the members of this project as to whether and how they might be willing and/or able to assist in recognizing the contributions of our editors. Thank you for your attention. Badbilltucker19:13, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
WikiCharts: Portal
Check out this WikiCharts: Portal tool. As the data matures, this could be an interesting way to help focus any improvement efforts, e.g., featured portal collaborations, on high traffic/impact portals. Rfrisbietalk03:35, 12 January 2007 (UTC)
Someone has created Wikipedia:WikiProject Usability/Clickable images, in effort to remove {{click}}. This is with good intention, but think wider discussion of this and possible alternatives available is needed. This user is now going through all the portal pages and doing mass removal of {{click}}. It's not being discussed on Portal talk pages, nor is any alternative being implemented in place of {{click}}. One alternative is the new ImageMap extension, which can be used on portal pages for "Related portals". (see Portal:Criminal justice) It doesn't yet work in templates, so can't be built into {{click}} itself at this point. Such mass removal of the template without discussion and putting in place an alternative is not okay with me. This is being discussed at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Usability/Clickable images. --Aude (talk) 14:50, 20 January 2007 (UTC)
I deleted this. I won't accept reviews lodged on a whim; if there were legitimate issues, raise them at the portal first before nominating it for demotion.--cj | talk20:17, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
I think all portals should be semi-protected. Because of the nature of the actual portal--all markup, no content--newbies have no reason to be editing them. The actual content, which they might want to edit, is on subpages. I have never seen a constructive edit by an IP to a portal page, and what constructive edits there have been (if any) are more than likely the work of Wikipedians who are not logged in. Anyone see a downside to this?--ragesoss22:27, 22 March 2007 (UTC)
The only downside would be for those adding interwiki links. However, I'm not so keen to protect all portals just yet. I'd support it for the 8 main portals (those linked from the Main Page) only at this point. I've already permanently semi-protected some of those portals' subpages.--cj | talk09:35, 6 April 2007 (UTC)
What do people think about this new portal created by someone the other day. I have major reservations and would like to hear other editors opinions (preferably on the talk page of the portal).--Zleitzen(talk)01:15, 18 April 2007 (UTC)
Something like {{Portal|name=Evangelion|image=Wikipe-tan without body.png}}. Remember to place it in the see also section only.--cj | talk02:51, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
Well, I have just discovered Portal:Bengal, another portal by the same user - User:Armanaziz, which depicts a historical and defunct name for a geographical location, with little reference to history. All the material of this article overlaps with Portal:Bangladesh and Portal:West Bengal. In fact, the articles and images on Portal:Bangladesh are currently dominating Portal:Bengal and Portal:SAARC, and that portal was created by the same user, who hasn't still posted any answer to my query. I guess, I am a bit surprised at this indiscriminate proliferation of portals. Aditya(talk • contribs)00:34, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
According to Wikipedia:Portal, "the idea of a portal is to help readers and/or editors navigate their way through Wikipedia topic areas through pages similar to the Main Page. In essence, portals are useful entry-points to Wikipedia content." While nevigating wikipedia, I myself felt a need for a portal / "useful entry-point", for articles relating to SAARC countries and Bengal. So, I decided to create the portals myself. I don't think any other justification is required. But just to give you an example how diverse the subject matters for Wikipedia portals can be, please refer to Portal:Mario, Portal:Heraldry, Portal:Military history of the Ottoman Empire etc.
I agree that most of the items in the newly created portals are also covered by other portals. But so what? What's the point you are trying to make? Since the portals use almost no new media files (image sound etc.) the addition to server space is barely minimum - a few megabytes at most. It is fully justified to take up that space in the server to better organize wikipedia.
Last but not least, by calling SAARC - an international organization which holds annual summit at head-of-the state level - a non-functional organization, you are clearly trying to push you personal views. Please refrain from such behavior since even wikipedia discussion pages are subject to WP:NPOV it is prohibited in Wikipedia:Talk page. Arman Aziz12:31, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
WP:P also says portals should cover broad subject areas. Furthermore, you are most certainly mistaken with regards to WP:NPOV — it applies only to encyclopædic content, not talk pages.--cj | talk12:16, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
Not sure whether SAARC and Bengal are being accused to be not broad enough as subject area or too broad! Anyway, thanks for the helpful suggestion about WP:NPOV, I'll reword my statements. Arman Aziz09:21, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
If the portals quoted by Arman Aziz is equally pointless then their existence shows the dire importance of reducing the portal clutter and creating a guideline of notability or usefulness or something. If they are not as pointless then the point in citing them is quite lost, I guess.
Please, research a bit more on SAARC to find that though the heads of states meet every four years or so, and never put up a serious agenda in those meetings. Also, research a bit on Bengal to find out that it's a historical entity and a portal can only be an "useful entry-point" if it features content to that end. My personal views are quite unbiased as I see, and not cluttered by the urge to defend my portal. It seems to a bit uncivil to order me in bold to refrain from certain behavior.
There used to be processes to get a consensus before someone created a Wikiproject or a Wikiportal in the past, both are defunct now as bureaucratic processes. But, it doesn't really mean that all portals should go and pass without a question. Aditya(talk • contribs)13:47, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
Couldn't but highlight a few points again - a) the cited examples of portals were used to illustrate the diversity in scope of portals in wikipedia, nothing else. b) SAARC heads of states meet periodically and they agree on some sort of agenda. Whether that is "serious" or not is a subjective judgement - and by trying to push that judgement here as a reason of not having a portal on that international bloc you are clearly and obviously trying to push your personal views which is forbidden in bold letter on Wikipedia:Talk page (first paragraph, last sentence). I just tried to remind you the basic principles of wikipedia, which your statement about SAARC on August 28 violates again. c) Please do some research on Bengal - you may try google, or a bit of onsite study may help - although Bengal is not a political entity, the people of the region (comprising of Bangladesh and West Bengal) share a common ethnic identity, have very similar culture, use a common language (Bengali) and also share a common history. There is a WikiProject Bengal (WP:BENGAL) on English Wikipedia and editors from Bangladesh and West Bengal are jointly maintaining a wikipedia in Bengali language. You personally may not feel the need of a useful entry point for items of common interest to this region, but many others (including myself) may do. Arman Aziz02:11, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
Perhaps you also have noticed that WP:NN is a WP policy that violates WP:NPOV by your standards... Well, let me get a few things straight. First, your portal on SAARC is not dealing with diplomacy and/or international relations between the member countries. It doesn't serve as an "entrypoint" to SAARC at all, apart from the lead article. It deals with South Asian countries in general. And then, your use of WP:BENGAL seems highly inappropriate, as that WikiProject is devoted largely to topics that either has conflicting views between West Bengal and Bangladesh, and is largely inactive now. How can it justify your portal? Which broda range of artciles it serving as an "entrypoint" to? Finally, those bold instruction may get considered as pieces of WP:ICA, right? May be we can cut down on those. Cheers. Aditya(talk • contribs)13:57, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
To me it seems like the discussion is gradually becoming more specific to scope of individual portals. I'd like to continue the discussion on Portal's talk page. I'll reply there. Please continue the discussion there if you feel like. Regarding WP:NN and WP:NPOV questioning notability versus pushing personal views - there is a gulf of difference between saying SAARC is not notable enough to have a portal by wikipedia standards versus saying SAARC should not have a portal because this international bloc is almost non-functional as it fails to agree on any serious agenda.
If you are seriously concerned about notability of SAARC and Bengal - then this discussion should be on a deletion debate, not here. Lastly, regarding WP:ICA, ICA stands for Ill-Considered Accusations. I don't believe my accusations were ill considered at all - it appeared to me that you are trying to use this wikipedia talk page to push your point-of-view about SAARC - which needed to be protested boldly. I have not used a single negative word about you. The purpose of putting the comments in bold-face was to draw your attention. Since that purpose seems to have been served and you have stopped making objectionable remarks about SAARC, I am removing the bold-formating from my earlier comments. Arman Aziz01:52, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
Concured. Both potals are encyclopedic and I don't see any Non-notable issue. It seems to me that, Aditya's illustrating Point here. Personal judgement is pretty much against the policy. So (Aditya) refrain from such type of behavior.--NAHID08:25, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
Objectionable remarks? My dear defender of SAARC, it was not an objectionable remark, it was rather a statement of the realities. SAARC summits gets often deferred (from Daily Star), it has little cooperation between them (from Daily Star), has not acieved anything significant (From Daily Star) - and hundreds more newscites are possible here. I am quoting the biggest Bangladeshi English newspaper, because Indian newspapers mostly doesn't even cover SAARC news on the front page, if they do at all. It seems my point of view is shared by many, while your point of view... I don't even know where that high-and-mighty ideal of SAARC you picked from. Sorry. Aditya(talk • contribs)10:24, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
Not ill considered? Look at you, dear. You have already removed the bold types, and struck out parts of your post. Very well considered, I am sure. BTW, it seems you have closed a thread on the talk page of your SAARC portal. Was that to prove that you really own it? Aditya(talk • contribs)10:28, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
The very fact that the heads of states of SAARC member countries join periodically in a summit, and that US, EU, Japan, Korea and China have requested and received official observer status for SAARC is enough proof of recognition of the existence and importance of SAARC at highest possible level within SAARC member countries and outside. Editorial comments about SAARC that you have quoted do express a point-of-view about SAARC. You are very much welcome to share that view there is nothing objectionable. But trying to establish that view as a reason for not having a portal on SAARC is objectionable and against Wikipedia policies. What newspapers say about the effectiveness of an international bloc is NOT a criterion in judgment of the notability of the bloc. Since you are interpreting my politeness of removing bold formatting as a weakness and have reengaged in pushing your point of view about SAARC, I am boldly claiming again:
1) there is NO DOUBT about the notability of SAARC by any Wikipedia standard; if you are really concerned about notability, please go through the formal process of deletion request; I WILL defend the notability there.
2) your attempt to use Wikipedia talk page as a vehicle to push or establish a point-of-view about SAARC is prohibited in WP:Talk page, so STOP THIS.
In your last comment you are accusing me of closing a thread on portal’s talk page, thereby I am supposedly trying to establish my ownership on the portal. I did mention that I would like to close a discussion, which means I am withdrawing my self from a pointless discussion. But have I deleted or archived any discussion? Have I barred anyone else from further posting to any thread? I’d very much like to close this discussion on this page – because apart from wasting time no one is achieving anything here. Does it mean I am tring to establish ownership on this wikiproject, too? Show me how wanting to close a pointless discussion violates any policy on Wikipedia or particularly the one that you have quoted. If you fail to show, then I have to conclude that you are the one who is actually engaged in WP:ICA. Arman Aziz03:15, 31 August 2007 (UTC)
As a postscipt to the unsuspecting readers: please take some time to go through the links that Aditya has cherry-picked to support his/her personal view (that SAARC is an almost non-functional international organization and hence doesn't deserve to have a portal on Wikipedia) in their full context. You'll see all of them actually recognize the potential and importance of this international bloc and are simply suggesting ways to make it more effective. Arman Aziz04:23, 31 August 2007 (UTC)
Therefore, the verdict of creator of the portals I used as examples is clear - we can and should have portals whenever we feel strongly for one. And, if someone opposes the trend it is pointless (What's the point you are trying to make?), not worthy of a discussion at this project (this discussion should be on a deletion debate, not here), unresearched (research a bit more), unacceptable behavior (refrain from such type of behavior), cherry-picking (cherry-picked), and of course a violation of WP:NPOV. This politeness I don't understand, negating existing views to uphold unsupported feelings, I don't understand. And, this urge to protect non-encyclopedic content by demeaning the questioner, I don't understand at all. Sorry for my ignorance, but your verdict doesn't seem to too appropriate. Well, I guess, I have trying to talk reason for a bit too long and have managed to make an enemy (that hurts). It should be left to the laws that governs large population bodies (i.e. droves of bees), where the collective doesn't go wrong even if individuals do. A cheer for the community. Aditya(talk • contribs)03:29, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
Since you just can't stop discrediting others contribution and pushing your own-point-of-view, then we would definitely ignore your comments. --NAHID18:52, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
Please, dear, it hurts. All you've done here is shouting at me - "refrain from such behavior", and bad mouthing me (see the comment above). If you want to ignore, then ignore, don't go about being incivil to people, especially someone you've been following around (in other words, trolling, though on a minor scale).
This discussion began as a inquiry to find the purpose of the SAARC portal, and since all I achieved was silence first and accusation of POV pushing later. When I expanded the inquiry to include the whole question of indiscriminate portal creation (there are not a lot of guidelines for notability of portals as in the scope of covered by the portals) I faced the accusation again, as well as a shouting direction, in bold letters. to refrain from behaviors stating policies that actually was found to be misplaced.
On top of that, the POV for which I was accused so many times (SAARC not a functional body) seems to be the dominant view of the article that lies at the base of the SAARC portal, featuring at the top of that very portal. But, the POV that opposes mine seems to be quite unsubstantial till now.
If you think that questioning your contribution is discrediting it, then may be you'd like to think again. Wikipedia is about a lot of volunteers, most very inexperienced at writing encyclopedias, checking and monitoring each others work. Besides, don't you think that repeatedly claiming someone's quite substantiated statements to be own-point-of-view is discrediting that person, as well as the whole idea of a credible encyclopedia?
Therefore, I am sure you can see that there was no discrediting or pushing my own-point-of-view at this end. But, there certainly was a lot of improper behavior on your part. I hope that you'll see that I really agree to Arman more often than not and I have already shown my appreciation for his work on a number of occasions, which he reciprocated with as much abundance. But, even the best of us can be wrong at times. The way out is discussing, not ignoring and accusations, much less false accusations. Even while discussion is happening we've agreed to and appreciated each other.
If this post is a bit too long, it is only so because I am hurt, surprised and baffled at your blasts that keeps repeatedly appearing out of the blue. Aditya(talk • contribs)14:47, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
I have decided that I won't discuss SAARC here anymore. I don't want to facilitate an irrelevant discussion on what SAARC has achieved and what has not achieved on a Wikipedia talk page just for the sake of the discussion. Anyone concerned about the notability of any of the portals being discussed here is free to raise a deletion request, which can be debated and be closed with a decision. But on this page the discussion, which is turning increasingly bitter, will go on and on without any conclusion. So why waste time?
However, I would like to place a gentle request to dear Aditya to have a look back at your own activity before accusing others of trolling. You are concerned about proliferation of indiscriminate portals on Wikipedia, and out of Wikipedia’s 1,000+ portals you find 2 portals (one on an international bloc comprising of 8 sovereign countries, and the second one on a geographic region with common ethnicity, culture and history) to be the best example of this "indiscriminate" activity; and interestingly both of them have just been created by the same editor! Don't you think this looks like something more than mere coincidence specially after you have just come out of a long and pointless discussion with the same editor on a featured portal candidate discussion? No matter how strongly you argue you are genuinely concerned about too many portals being created on Wikipedia and not intend to discredit any specific editor, to any reader with common sense this whole posting is bound to appear more sinister. Since you want community to give opinion here, let's accept the fact that whoever else has to give opinion on this discussion apart from the two of us, will have to appear here out of the blue. Arman Aziz04:11, 6 September 2007 (UTC)
The reply to the post above I'm posting to its rightful place - User talk:Armanaziz. Anyone interested can go there to read it. Who, unlike Nahid, is not in the habit of just removing my posts from his talk page. Just one clarification, the pointless argument that you mentioned was about one of your portals, which still remains pretty much a one man show (my point of the discussion) and the one person you have come to hate, namely me, is the only one trying lend you a helping hand there. Please, don't assume bad faith like that. It really hurts. And, don't take things so personally. Instead of attacking me personally you could have mentioned quite a lot of other portals (oh my god, I didn't know there were 1000+ portals, does these "entrypoints" get any hit at all?), like Portal:Final Fantasy, Portal:Sony Playstation, Portal:Mario, Portal:Zelda, Portal:Discworld, Portal:Dragonlance, Portal:Hampshire, Portal:Kent, Portal:University of Texas at Austin or Portal:Fire, to name just few, as equally pointless portals.
Out of so much hostility I thank you for this gem of a direction. My accidental stumble on two of the useless portals and the ensuing tirades against me has done a lot of good in the end (I love discussions, even the hostile ones, as you always can learn a lot when approached with an open mind). It has shown that the problem of indiscriminate portal creation runs a lot deeper than expected. Well, in such a huge project you're always bound to find gold or dirt by stumbling on it. This current discussion has become so full of animosity that I think I am going to start another discussion. With or without a certain user included this is a Wikipedia-wide problem. Cheers. Aditya(talk • contribs)12:37, 7 September 2007 (UTC)
Question on possible new careers guidance portal
Hi I am interested in a portal that links together many articles that eventually form an alternative Encyclopedia of Careers and Vocational Guidance. Its way to big of a project for me to be the sole portal editor and I'm not even sure portals are the way to kick such a thing off. Please help me brain storm how such a thing can be started since it is exactly the sort of quickly changing, massive undertaking that is better left to Wikipedia then traditional print. —Preceding unsigned comment added by DodgeTheBullet (talk • contribs) 14:05, 15 September 2007 (UTC)
Please provide opinions on U.S. roads vs. North American roads
Is someone responsible for ensuring deletion discussions are posted here?
On the 5th and 6th a whole slew of Portal MfDs were posted at WP:MFD. I don't see any of them listed on this page or discussed here. Are most portal nominations coming from here in the first place or is someone (or a bot) actively posting them here?--Doug.(talk • contribs)02:01, 8 October 2007 (UTC)
So as not to be guilty of trying to pawn it off on others, I posted them. But if there is a bot or a process, or if someone regularly handles this, please let me know, especially because these things seem to be coming in like zucchini lately on MfD.--Doug.(talk • contribs)02:32, 8 October 2007 (UTC)
Could someone help set this portal for automatic rotation on the selected article, selected image and did you know sections please? Unisouth15:48, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
I like your original proposal of having a box on the main page, but as for portals, one specifically for 2008 would be way to narrow. From what I can tell, there are about 100 or so articles for the 2008 games, most of which are lists, and schedules. Perhaps you could work something out at Portal:Olympics for more coverage of what you want running up to and during the games. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Searchme (talk • contribs) 03:19, 13 November 2007 (UTC)
At the risk of getting into a confrontation such as that had with Aditya above, why is there a philosophy and thought portal as well as a philosophy portal and a thought portal? The current proliferation of the things seems intuitively to be a waste of time and resources. Has anyone checked whether people find such portals useful? Anarchia (talk) 04:40, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
We're really just trying out different ideas to see if any of them actually help make it easier to find stuff here. By the way, you did give me another idea! I'll try to summarize it at Portal talk:Contents some time. :-) RichardF (talk) 13:06, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
The portal namespace improvement drive: Contents and megaportals
This is a proposal to start The portal namespace improvement drive: Contents and megaportals. It is the outgrowth of many discussions at Portal talk:Contents and elsewhere, including one about megaportals – comprehensive portals that cover the landscape on high-level topics like those listed on the Main Page. It is motivated by the widely held view that the portals currently listed on the Main Page do not live up to established standards of quality for such portals. In addition, the portal namespace contents pages are only one of many partially overlapping ways editors have organized Wikipedia's articles. Moreover, the navigation schemes for each set of pages, between each set, and among the rest of the encyclopedia pages, present a number of issues as well.
The following chart represents the four key namespaces related to this improvement drive. Portals are the doorways to the encyclopedia's articles. The categories form the network of how pages are tied together; and the Wikipedia namespace provides the project's workspace. The scope of the improvement drive will consider anything that is or consensually should be in portal namespace as fair game.
Arts, Crafts, Culture, Film, Language, Literature, Music, Visual arts
Culture, Film
Geography and places
Geography
Health and fitness
Health, Medicine
Health sciences, Nutrition
History and events
Archaeology, Events, History
People and self
Entertainment, People, Radio
Biography
Social sciences and society
Business, Economics, Education, Law, Military, Politics, Psychology, Society
Society
Structure
Thought
Philosophy and thinking
Philosophy, Thought
Religion and belief systems
Religion
The following chart organizes the above main topics TOC systems by the group of Fundamental categories. It demonstrates the twelve current topical sections for Contents subpage TOCs can be used to organize all main TOC topics. It also highlights the value of futher discussions about what names to use for some of the TOC section headers. RichardF (talk) 22:20, 23 December 2007 (UTC)
To create the network of classification systems, each TOC main topic was placed under all of its own topical parent categories. This process was repeated until a fundamental category was reached. When more than one parent was present, those one or two most related to other TOC topics were selected for the next higher level. The result is a hierarchical article topics classification system that includes references to the network of parents for a topic while also describing a clearer tree structure from each TOC topic to the fundamental categories. Because the Featured articles TOC amounts to an alphabetical index, those topics unique to it are included only under a previously existing Basic outline category, without adding any intervening categories.
A basic outline that includes only the main tree elements was constructed from the more detailed outlines. It includes several TOC topics and a few placeholders. That outline then was cross-referenced with the set of Portal TOC headers and Browsebar labels. The topics from the basic outline then were rearranged to create the portals outline. A few of the characteristics of the basic and portals outlines are listed below.
Excluding items only in the TOC of Featured articles, 36 unique main topics were found. They are included in a separate list.
All main topics under Information and Structure also are listed under one of the other fundamental categories, making these two categories unnecessary for completing the basic network of classification systems.
The twelve Portal TOC headers (with Browsebar labels) were used to organize each of the 36 unique main topics and related placeholders under exactly one heading. This means the existing set of Portal TOC sections is sufficient to uniquely organize each topic under allMain topic TOC systems. This was accomplished by placing a topic under the lowest available heading in a topical classification tree.
The terms used in Portal TOC headers and Browsebar labels do not always reflect the highest topics included in their respective classifications. Adjustments to some of these terms merit further discussion.
The following notations are used to help describe how the outlines were formed.
Bold categories are included in at least one Main topic TOC system.
Italic categories are used as the parent/child in the tree when more than one is present on a line.
Many of the described tasks already are underway or are about to begin. This improvement drive is just another way to help communicate what can be accomplished and enlist broad-based participation. Feel free to post your comments here, or anywhere else you like. Happy editing! :-) RichardF (talk) 04:32, 15 December 2007 (UTC)