Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Computing/Archive 9
CiscoWorks Vandalismhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CiscoWorks While maybe funny, "Small Penis Network Management Solution (SNMS)" and others might potentially not be accurate. Request for comments: cleaning up Timeline of programming languagesTimeline of programming languages has been a bit cluttered for a some time, so in an effort to clean it up, i proposed some inclusion criteria and related changes to make it more useful; i'd like to invite anyone interested to comment or help out. —Piet Delport (talk) 2009-10-23 00:18 Section names in technical articlesTo discuss the section names of the following articles: There are three discussions ongoing that relate to the general efficiency of the future structure of our technical articles' inter-linking and interrelation. The issues are section naming and article sizing. Quick overview of the ideas I bring up: I propose as a guidline:
And the Wikipedia:Manual of style#Section headings currently says:
Join the discussion at WT:Manual_of_Style/Archive_111#Section_names_should_not_normally_contain_trademarked_products. Happy editing! — CpiralCpiral 00:14, 12 December 2009 (UTC) Microsoft Binder IconsHello, I was wondering if anyone could help me. I understand that Microsoft discontinued Binder in XP, but if you had a binder 2000 document (.obd) file on an XP computer, would the Icon be like an XP style one, the same as the Win 2000 one or one of those 'placeholder' white icons? I also have many screenshots of Microsoft Binder in 2000 if anyone feels that they are appropriate for the article. 95jb14 (talk) 16:50, 12 December 2009 (UTC). HyperText Template HelpThe article for HyperText Templates has been highlighted as being in need of alot of work, I created the artice but wthought I'd best bring it to your attention. 95jb14 (talk) 18:32, 14 December 2009 (UTC).
Government Data Management PracticesI've started an article at User:Joe_carmel/Good_Data_Practices_Related_to_Government_Data in collaboration with the W3C eGovernment Intererst Group and DAMA. Please help us create an appropriate article for this topic. Joe Carmel (talk) 11:30, 17 December 2009 (UTC) Multidrop Bus reworkI've done a bit of rewriting on the Multidrop_bus article, but feel that it is still too little information there. It'd be great if someone could look at the current state of things. 94.218.58.72 (talk) 17:21, 17 December 2009 (UTC) Citing History as Told by First-hand ParticipantsOnly a few people know the real history behind the birth of XPath, and I'm one of them. The real history was swept under the rug because a small start-up made a tactical decision not to confront Microsoft over its bullying. That history probably could be gleaned from written records by a good paleotechnologist, but only with a lot of effort. How do I, one of the participants in that history, cite my report of the actual history if I add it to the XPath article? It should be possible to get several of the other participants to vouch for the report, but I don't know if that helps. Or must unwritten history be left out of Wikipedia? Jtlapp (talk) 02:46, 18 December 2009 (UTC)
Splitting List of emerging technologiesI have suggested that the section List of emerging technologies#Information technology should be given its own article. The idea is to hopefully attract more experts in the field by making it more specialized. A suggested name is List of emerging information technologies, or just Emerging information technologies. Please give your input at the talk page. A problem with this page is that none of the technologies are supported by any references. What criteria should be used for including a technology in the list, or removing a technology? I would prefer a page about current trends in research and development, ongoing research, planned standards and products, etc. Related pages and categories are
Mange01 (talk) 16:44, 21 December 2009 (UTC) Annunciation of an outline for Operating systemTalk:Operating_system#Proposing_an_outline is an invitation to participate in the layout the future structure (and thereby content) of the operating system article, a rare opportunity for such a directional nudge. — CpiralCpiral 22:38, 21 December 2009 (UTC) Merge Operating system and KernelOperating system is pseudo Bclass. Much of the content of operating system is irrelevant, and the French, whose fr:operating system is currently in discussion to move up from B-Class, have accused it of being unscientific. The makeover en:operating system is now undergoing is mostly removal of filler text that filled a starter-class Operating system article spun-off from Computer software. Currently it contains such irrelevancies as the product histories and trademark popularity of OS's, and those can be ignored by the critical referee for any referents in this exposition. The vision I have for Operating system is a general-purpose operating system article. Kernel (computing) is a 68 kb-sized, B class article, which means, and I quote, "some sections may need expansion", and thus needs more space to accept "expansion" gracefully. Presented here for Operating system and Kernel,
is a special tranclusory Each of the five files would be a co-op guided by a main article, if referenced, and managed via Wikiproject computing watchers and editors managing the WP:Transclusion#Markup.
The issue I raise is multi-paging. Your input is multi-programming. Are you too busy to include the process I propose? I'm talking about time-sharing, and efficient watchers of this page-concurrency amongst the multi-members of Wikiproject computing. We will all be better off in this virtual world when the Google search results for either "operating system" or for "kernel" deserve Wikipedia in their top rung. Happy editing! — CpiralCpiral 23:14, 22 December 2009 (UTC) |
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