Saturday, December 28, 2019

Chinese elm (Ulmus Parvifolia): These 22 million WikiTree profiles - and re WUaS Wikidata Q-item3s or related PIN# * The author Douglas Adams' Wikidata Q item # - https://m.wikidata.org/wiki/Q42 - as WikiTree profile is the idea, - at WUaS too



WIkiTree is 22 million profiles created by a lot of garbage GEDCOM uploads and work done of mostly retired people using an old modified Wiki 1.11.0 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Special:Version .... they don't have the resources to upgrade to the latest version of Wiki software....


*
An amazingly big step ... what might Lydia and WikiData say about resources, I wonder? (Is it possible to include her in this conversation, I wonder too?


*
Don't involve Lydia you can set up your own Wikibase and start playing reread the consequencies of adding bad genealogy data without sources
* https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/951698/bot-import-of-the-peerage-data-in-wikidata-good-or-bad-news
* https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/User_talk:GZWDer#User:GZWDer_(flood)_creating_duplicates



*
Thanks for the suggestion, Magnus. These 22 million Wikitree profiles may help, since World Univ & Sch's main focus is creating a Wikidata Q-item # or similar Personal Identification Number PIN# in Wikidata for our 500-2000 matriculating students in autumn 2020 and eventually for Universitians in all 200 countries and in all 7111 known living languages, and then conceptually for all 7.5 billion people, - and as WUaS makes interoperable out "front end" eg You at WUaS - https://wiki.worlduniversityandschool.org/wiki/You_at_World_University - with our Wikidata "Back end." WUaS is also seeking to plan for all 7.5 billion people, each a PIN# in Wikidata, for these 4 reasons

... iv) a single family tree for genealogy research as in WikiTree (https://www.wikitree.com, and see too World Family Tree, and for aggregating DNA samples too


https://scott-macleod.blogspot.com/2019/12/ohio-river-if-wikitree-plans-for-single.html


iv) a single family tree for genealogy research as in WikiTree (https://www.wikitree.com ...), and for aggregating DNA samples too (see item 2 again).

In what ways could Wikdiata plan for all 7.5 billion people each a Wikidata Q-item # and for the above reasons and many more (and keeping in sync with Wikipedia's mission of "the sum of all human knowledge" where all 7.5 billion people generate this with their language, for example)?

- https://scott-macleod.blogspot.com/2019/11/arabian-sand-gazelle-minutes-for-annual.html

... so I think WUaS's strategy re these will inform engaging Wikibase. Are you a teacher of Wikibase, Magnus?



*
Why Wikidata.... you dont have one argument why they should be in WIkidata.... I hope you understand that it is Open Free data and Wikidata objects are deleted...  see

Wikidata has problem scaling today and it will never be able to have 7.5 billion objects.... see Europeana objects that they copied from Wikidata and now are deleted in Wikidata but the still reference them https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T240738


*
WUaS donated itself to Wikidata, Magnus, in 2015, and received WUaS Miraheze MediaWiki in 2017 ...



*
The author Douglas Adams' Wikidata Q item # - https://m.wikidata.org/wiki/Q42 - as WikiTree profile is the idea, - at WUaS too





*

Welcome to The Free Family Tree, growing stronger since 2008.
  1. Together we're growing an accurate single family tree using DNA and traditional genealogical sources.
  2. Privacy controls enable us to integrate modern family history.
  3. Extraordinary protections ensure that our shared tree will never be lost.
  4. Everything is 100% free including many benefits for genealogists who sign our Honor Code.
Our tree includes 22,186,108 profiles (6,160,071 with DNA test connections) edited by 664,226 genealogists from around the world

Welcome to The Free Family Tree, growing stronger since 2008. Together we're growing an accurate single family tree using DNA and traditional genealogical sources. Privacy controls enable us to integrate modern family history. Extraordinary protections ensure that our shared tree will never be lost. Everything is 100% free including many benefits for genealogists who sign our Honor Code. Our tree includes 22,186,108 profiles (6,160,071 with DNA test connections) edited by 664,226 genealogists from around the world

*



https://www.wikitree.com









*


























...



No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.