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Re: [Wikipedia-l] [Foundation-l] Why is MediaWiki so low-tech? Hsiang-Tai Chien Mon Jan 08 12:00:33 2007
Maybe this is what you want? Wikiwyg brings Wiki WYSIWYG to MediaWiki: http://www.socialtext.com/node/90 Wikiwygify wikipedia.org: http://demo.wikiwyg.net/wikiwyg/demo/wikipedia/ -- Hsiang-Tai Chien (H.T.) Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia! http://en.wikipedia.org My Wikipedia User Page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Htchien My blog - Hsiang-Tai @ Taiwan: http://htchien.blogspot.com My Flickr Photo Album: http://www.flickr.com/photos/htchien Think Different, Do Smarter, Work for Joy!! > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf > Of Virgil Ierubino > Sent: Sunday, January 07, 2007 12:31 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: [Foundation-l] Why is MediaWiki so low-tech? > > Why is MediaWiki so low-tech? > > I understand the imperitive for maximal accessibility, but is > it not also true that, these days, fewer and fewer people are > using browsers that can't handle advanced features? The fact > of the matter is that a website's > *usability* is improved by taking advantage of the > higher-tech architecture that modern browsers allow you to > use. Can't MediaWiki default to its current state, but offer > a per-user preference to turn on advanced options? > > Look at a site like Facebook, (http://www.facebook.com), for > example, which is possibly one of the most beautifully > constructed websites I have ever encountered. It is simple in > layout and ridiculously easy to use on account of very good > design, and the use of advanced code generating popups, > immediate editing, etc. Furthermore their code is pristine; I > have never seen an error, even in the advanced features, on > any browser. > > The kind of MediaWiki advanced features I'm talking about > could be something like instant editing. Think about if > you're reading a long section of an article, and midway down > there's a spelling error. There are so many reasons to not > fix it: you'd have to scroll up to click the edit link on > that section, you'd have to wait for it to load, you'd have > to find the place again in the edit box, you'd have to wait > for it to load again, and all this time you won't be able to > continue reading your article, and you'll have lost your > place. What if you could just click next to the relevant > paragraph, turning it into an edit box on the same page - no > loading - edit it, save it, and never once have to switch > page. Something similar to the way you can edit posts in > vBulletin without having to change pages. I know for sure > that a feature like this would double the speed at which (and > the likelihood of which) articles are improved. > > Obviously once you accept the usage of advanced elements like > this there's no stopping how much easier you can make the > site, and how user friendly. If the only grounds to not > include this kind of feature are accessibility, just put each > feature on a switch in user preferences. > _______________________________________________ > foundation-l mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l > > ___________________________________________________ 您的生活即時通 - 溝通、娛樂、生活、工作一次搞定! http://messenger.yahoo.com.tw/ _______________________________________________ Wikipedia-l mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikipedia-l
- Re: [Wikipedia-l] [Foundation-l] Why is MediaWiki so low-tech? Hsiang-Tai Chien 2007/01/08 <=