Wikimedia blog

News from inside the Wikimedia Foundation.org

Archive for March, 2009

Over 250K new images join the Wikimedia Commons

The Saxon State Library is a library in Dresden that emanates from the merger of the state library with the university library.

Yesterday, Wikimedia Germany announced an extraordinary collaboration with one of the largest libraries in Germany, the Land Library of Saxony – State and University Library Dresden (SLUB). The collaboration will see roughly 250,000 images from the library made available to Wikimedia Commons under a creative commons license.

A translation of the German chapter press release (with huge thanks to user:Weasel for the translation) can be found below.  The info can also be found posted in German and English on the Wikimedia Commons:

Berlin, March 31, 2009
Meeting Point Wikipedia

Cooperation deal with one of the largest libraries sealed.

As the first German library, the Land Library of Saxony – State and
University Library Dresden (SLUB) has concluded a cooperation agreement
with Wikimedia Germany e.V. In a first step, the German Photo Collection
of the SLUB makes available ca. 250,000 image files from its repository
for free use to Wikimedia Commons, a sister project of Wikipedia.

The photos, the correspondent captions and further meta data will be
uploaded to Commons during the common months by voluntary helpers of
Wikimedia, then connected step-by-step with personal identification data
(? literally “personal norm data”, some kind of formalized assignment of
identification) and the relevant Wikipedia articles. Apart from that,
the metadata supplied by the German Photo Collection can be enriched,
commented on and supplied with geographical detail by Wikipedia users.
All results of this work are flowing back to the database of the German
Photo Collection. In this way, the SLUB too directly profits from the
new collaboration.

No rights of third parties concerning the image material supplied are
standing in the way of using it under the free license “Creative Commons
BY-SA 3.0″. The cooperation will, in the words of Dr Jens Bove, the
director of the German Photo Collection, “enhance the publicity and
reach of the photographic treasures of the German Photo Collection”. At
the same time, the SLUB is a clear testament to the support of the
international Open Access Initiative, which seeks open access to
scientific information. “The collaboration with one of the largest
scientific libraries in Germany with Wikimedia and the free media
repository Commons is another important step towards the free
availability of knowledge.”, explains Sebastian Moleski, director of
Wikimedia Deutschland.

“This cooperation is therefore exemplary for the strategy of Wikimedia
to make the knowledge of humanity accessible to anyone worldwide,” Free
Access to information, is the motto that is on top, too, of the
political agenda of the International Federation of Library Associations
and Institutions (IFLA). President of the IFLA, Prof Dr Claudia Lux, who
at the same time serves as general director of the Central and State
Library of Berlin, is therefore very pleased about the cooperation
between SLUB and Wikimedia: “This cooperation enables many people
worldwide to use library resources and thereby expand their knowledge.
That is a benefit for everyone!”

This is a great victory for SLUB, Wikimedia Germany, the Commons, and perhaps most importantly for all the users of the web, for now and, well . . . forever.

We know Wikimedia German has been very active in this space, and we can only expect more incredible partnerships like this to unfold in the coming months.  A special thanks to Mathias Schindler who has been particularly active and vocal in pushing these kinds of partnerships forward.  Prost!

Jay Walsh, Communications<

English Wikipedia brief outage

We had a crash on our database master for English Wikipedia. Domas is restarting it and swapping it out for another master server; should be back online in a few minutes.

In the meantime, Wikipedia in other languages and all other Wikimedia sites remain unaffected.

wiki-problem

Update 23:39 UTC: We’re back! Looks like approximately 25 minutes of breakage.

An out-of-memory condition on the database master server ended up killing the MySQL daemon…

Google Summer of Code student applications open for Wikimedia!

Google Summer of Code is now open for student applications!

We’ve had 5 submissions come in so far… don’t be shy! :) Also don’t be shy about hanging out on our mailing lists and IRC channels and getting feedback from other MediaWiki developers on your project ideas.

The more feedback you get, the better you can make your submission… and the awesomer the result will be!

The application period ends April 3, 2009 at 19:00 UTC — don’t be late!

(We could still use a couple more project mentors too…)

Add Media Wizard and Firefogg on test.wikipedia.org

I am inviting people to check out the add media wizard and Firefogg on test.wikipedia.org.To help test go to you user preferences on that server and enable the add media wizard gadget. You can add general feedback here.

This post is cross posted on metavid.org

Basic Feature Overview:

add media wizard

The Add Media Wizard adds a little “add media” button to every edit page letting you open up media search system to inject images and movie clips into your page. Presently the media search system searches commons, archive.org and metavid.org. (note archive.org inserts are not yet working because of a redirect bug we should have that fixed soon).

firefog logo

firefogg logo

Firefogg is the really cool extension that everyone using open video on the web should know about! It packages ffmpeg2theora transcoder letting web sites trigger clients uploads of videos from whatever local format they have. Once you have enabled the add media wizard the site upload form gets a little use Firefogg button. Which you can use to enable the transcoder.

You may also want to see Brianna’s blog post made early this year about these media features. Stay tuned for wider gadget deployment ;) … if your can’t wait you can always add

update you can now use the add-media-wizard via the mwEmbed gadget.

to your User:UserName/monobook.js page. (note we have not yet enabled copy by url uploads on the other sites so you can’t import resources from archive sites yet)

Wikimedia Tech joins Wikimedia Blog

Last week the blog family of Wikimedia was expanded with the addition of the Wikimedia Technical Blog.  Fairly self-explanatory in its naming, the Technical blog will explore all matters software, hardware, and infrastructure relating to Wikimedia.  That includes the servers and capacity that deliver Wikipedia to hundreds of millions of users around the world every month, not to mention the open-source wiki platform MediaWiki.

Helming the blog will be our own tech team, headed by our CTO Brion Vibber, alongside the pool of volunteers who work on the code and keep our systems humming along.

The Technical Blog is also part of Planet Wikimedia, the RSS blog aggregator for all blogs Wikimedia related – a must-subscribe if wiki is your thing.

Happy blogging to the technical team!

Jay Walsh, Communications<

WikiSym, Wikimania submission deadlines coming

WikiSym 2009 has pushed back the deadline on their call for papers by a few more days — get your paper or workshop submissions in by April 2!

This year’s WikiSym will be in Orlando, Florida in October. WikiSym usually has a slightly more ‘academic’ feel than Wikimania, which tends to be more community-oriented (and of course more Wikimedia-specific), but I’ve thoroughly enjoyed the ones I’ve been to (San Diego 2005 and Odense 2006).

Of course, the Wikimania 2009 deadlines are also coming up! Workshops and presentations are due April 15… just like my taxes. :P

Google Summer of Code needs you… to mentor student projects!

We’re a mentoring organization for the Google Summer of Code again this year, and we’re dead set on making it our awesomest summer ever!

One key thing though is making sure that students and potential students have access to a mentor who can answer their questions and just help steer them into becoming an active member of our development community.

If you’re an experienced MediaWiki developer and would like to help out with selecting and mentoring student projects, please give us a shout! We’ll take you even if you live in the southern hemisphere. ;)

We need folks who’ll be available online fairly regularly over the summer and are knowledgeable about MediaWiki — not necessarily knowing every piece of it, but knowing where to look so you can help the students help themselves.

If you’re interested, don’t forget to apply soon! Student submissions will complete next week and we’ll need to start selecting then… (See Google’s FAQ on what mentorship organizations do and program eligibility.)

Code updates going live to Wikimedia sites

After a few weeks of bug fixes, we’ve caught up with MediaWiki development code review and I’m pushing out an update to the live sites. This fixes a lot of little bugs, and hopefully doesn’t cause introduce too many new ones. :)

As usual in addition to lots of offline and individual testing among our staff and volunteer developers, we’ve done a shakedown on test.wikipedia.org — and as usual we can fully expect a few more issues to have cropped up that weren’t already found.

Don’t be alarmed if you do find a problem; just let us know at our bug tracker or on the tech IRC channels (#wikimedia-tech on Freenode).

We should be resuming our weekly update schedule soon, and will continue to improve our pre-update staging and shakedown testing to keep disruption to a minimum and awesome improvements to a maximum.

For those of you reading via the Planet aggregator, I’d also like to announce that we’ve started a blog for Wikimedia tech activity & MediaWiki development, in part because I want to make sure community members can easily follow what we’re working on and give feedback before we push things out.

I’d very much like to make sure that we’ve got regular contacts among the various project communities who can help coordinate with us on features, bugs, and general thoughts which might affect some projects distinctly from others.

– brion vibber (brion @ wikimedia.org)
CTO, Wikimedia Foundation
San Francisco

MediaWiki’s SCAP map

I’ve been trying to keep MediaWiki software updates for Wikimedia’s sites going roughly on a weekly basis, but sometimes we do get a little behind. While you’re waiting, it can be nice to get a quick visual overview of the state of code review — how much still needs to be looked over, and how much is ready to go?

Inspired by the disk defrag tools of yore, Splarka whipped up a JavaScript gadget to do just that:

scapmap

Until we get it fully integrated, for now you can enable the “SCAP map” gadget in your MediaWiki.org user preferences, then click the “Overview” tab that’ll appear on the code review revision list pages to pop up the summary map. Spiffy!

(“scap”, originally “sync-common-all-php”, is the internal deployment script we use to update the code files to all our servers. It’s a word you’ll hear a lot if you hang in #wikimedia-tech IRC. ;)

Welcome to Fred Vassard

I just wanted to post on our blog a warm welcome to our new systems administrator, Fred Vassard.   Today is Fred’s first day at Wikimedia, and we are already giving him a ton of work to do ;]

Welcome Fred, you will crash the cluster soon enough….