User talk:John Stephenson/Archive 6: Difference between revisions
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== Your edit on [[Gaius Iulius Caesar (name)]] == | == Your edit on [[Gaius Iulius Caesar (name)]] == | ||
Hi John, I see you've removed the linguistics category from the article and the metadata pages. First, I have no problem with this article being in the Classics workgroup only. But one question: do aspects of historical linguistics (incl. philological methods) and etymology of ancient words (Latin, Greek, PIE etc.) not belong into the linguistics group as well? Or do we have a CZ-policy to include only articles dealing with contemporary (= "non-historical") linguistics in the that workgroup? I know that modern linguistics don't really emphasize the historical approaches anymore in many countries, but to my mind that's a bit insular. Cheers, <span style="border: 3px solid #90ade3;">[[User:Arne Eickenberg|<span style="background: #bad1fb; color: #000000;"> Arne Eickenberg </span>]][[User_talk:Arne Eickenberg|<span style="background: #90ade3; color: #FFFFFF;"> talk</span>]]</span> 06:59, 12 August 2007 (CDT) | Hi John, I see you've removed the linguistics category from the article and the metadata pages. First, I have no problem with this article being in the Classics workgroup only. But one question: do aspects of historical linguistics (incl. philological methods) and etymology of ancient words (Latin, Greek, PIE etc.) not belong into the linguistics group as well? Or do we have a CZ-policy to include only articles dealing with contemporary (= "non-historical") linguistics in the that workgroup? I know that modern linguistics don't really emphasize the historical approaches anymore in many countries, but to my mind that's a bit insular. Cheers, <span style="border: 3px solid #90ade3;">[[User:Arne Eickenberg|<span style="background: #bad1fb; color: #000000;"> Arne Eickenberg </span>]][[User_talk:Arne Eickenberg|<span style="background: #90ade3; color: #FFFFFF;"> talk</span>]]</span> 06:59, 12 August 2007 (CDT) | ||
==[[Butler]]== | |||
Butler is ready for approval. As I have been involved as an author, would you do the honors? I'll also ask Anton--whoever gets it first. :-) —[[User:Stephen Ewen|Stephen Ewen]] [[User talk:Stephen Ewen|(Talk)]] 23:49, 17 August 2007 (CDT) |
Revision as of 22:49, 17 August 2007
I am off-line for much of 15th August - 21st September.
Guilt in U.S. law
John: I don't want to sound bitchy, so please don't take this that way, but what you did makes the three figures in the 'guilt' article into solid black boxes on my monitor, as the CZ logo was in the Main Page's talk page not long ago. And if you would put them under each other, instead of side-by-side, the full width of the text would fit on my screen and so be readable, which it wasn't the way I had it and still isn't. (On the other hand, I'm the one person in the world who doesn't have any reason to read it.) Anyhow, thanks much for your prompt attention to it, and I leave it in your capable hands, to tinker with further or not as the spirit moves you. -- k kay 00:24, 2 August 2007 (CDT)
- PNG images appear that way in IE6. —Stephen Ewen (Talk) 00:55, 2 August 2007 (CDT)
Only sometimes -- they were already PNG images when I posted them, and I could see them then but spreading too wide across the page for me to read the article text. From the discussion about the CZ logo, it seems to have to do with filling with transparent instead of a color, and Larry Sanger observed that a large percentage of users are using the older versions, and he was the one who figured out what to do so I could see it again. -- k kay 01:49, 2 August 2007 (CDT)
- What did he suggest because i note that the main page is still using a transparent version. Should we not be uploading transparent PNG's? Chris Day (talk) 02:04, 2 August 2007 (CDT)
It was on 'Talk: Main Page' on 23 & 24 July; you can get to that part of that page thru my contributions. -- k kay 02:49, 2 August 2007 (CDT)
- This page looks okay in Firefox and IE7. Not sure what to do here, except put them one underneath the other. John Stephenson 03:43, 2 August 2007 (CDT)
I didn't do nuthin'. I just uploaded the older, working logo. I have no idea why it was working and why the new one isn't. What I do know is that we cannot have PNGs appearing black to large percentages of our users, no matter how much contempt we might personally have for outdated versions of IE (no offense to users thereof). --Larry Sanger 05:10, 2 August 2007 (CDT)
Martial Arts In Culture of Japan
Sure thing, I'll get on writing something for the Culture of Japan. I think I'll write about martial arts in Japanese culture, as judo is just part of it, along with sumo, karate, samurai culture etc. I'm not sure I can place everything in perfect context, as I'm not a resident of Japan, but perhaps somebody else can check on that later. Andrew Chong 03:05, 2 August 2007 (CDT)
- Ok, I've added a Culture_of_Japan#Martial_arts if you want to check it out. There's still some overlap between the martial arts and sports sections, and I'm not quite sure yet how to deal with that. Andrew Chong 08:15, 2 August 2007 (CDT)
Samantha Smith newspaper scan
Should i email the newspaper it was from (The Boston Globe)? Would they really be concerned about a scan of a 22 year old page? It should qualify under the United States Fair Use law and the Australian Fair Dealing one. Paul Austin 21:07, 3 August 2007 (CDT)
- I followed up on this, see User_talk:Paul_Austin#Samantha_Smith_photo for explanation. —Stephen Ewen (Talk) 03:22, 5 August 2007 (CDT)
Martial arts
Thanks, it seemed like Citizendium could use some good articles on the martial arts. Actually, the pitiful state of martial arts articles on Wikipedia and the petty squabbling and plain incorrect views that accompanied those articles are really what set me off to look for an alternative to Wikipedia and led me to stumble upon Citizendium. I'm really hoping things will be different here.
As for the martial arts page, I've been working on an article for a day or two and will put it up soon as a rough outline. I'm not quite sure what category to put it in, though, and I think it might deserve a category of its own. Currently, it falls under sports, but not all martial arts are sports, and some absolutely reject the idea of being defined as such. In addition, should the article be for "martial art" or "martial arts"? I couldn't find any policy on the matter. Andrew Chong 22:23, 4 August 2007 (CDT)
- Just to update you, I've added a rough version of martial arts. Hopefully, more people will join in, as even writing the parts that I did has proven to be a rather tasking endeavor. Andrew Chong 00:51, 5 August 2007 (CDT)
C (Programming language) Article
Hi John, I see you made a few changes on the C article. Please can you check the Talk:C page and tell me what you think of the points I raised there. I want to make the changes I suggested but wanted some other opinions before going ahead. As intimated in my submission, I don't think the C article should be in the computers workgroup as it should refer to the alphabet letter and the article for the programming language C should be at C (Programming language) as it has been done on Wikipedia (see talk page for links). Thanks
Gay community
John - thanks so much for the vote and the kind words. I had rush written it and almost fell over when I read it was nominated! I have been on the road all week, without checking in here at all. Am going back to it now to look at adding some citations that I think it really needs. Thanks again. --Ian Johnson 07:18, 11 August 2007 (CDT)
Your edit on Gaius Iulius Caesar (name)
Hi John, I see you've removed the linguistics category from the article and the metadata pages. First, I have no problem with this article being in the Classics workgroup only. But one question: do aspects of historical linguistics (incl. philological methods) and etymology of ancient words (Latin, Greek, PIE etc.) not belong into the linguistics group as well? Or do we have a CZ-policy to include only articles dealing with contemporary (= "non-historical") linguistics in the that workgroup? I know that modern linguistics don't really emphasize the historical approaches anymore in many countries, but to my mind that's a bit insular. Cheers, Arne Eickenberg talk 06:59, 12 August 2007 (CDT)
Butler
Butler is ready for approval. As I have been involved as an author, would you do the honors? I'll also ask Anton--whoever gets it first. :-) —Stephen Ewen (Talk) 23:49, 17 August 2007 (CDT)