The unusual suspects…
This post was written by Pat Hadley, Wikimedian in Residence at York Museums Trust A volcanologist, watercolourist, botanist and forger….walk … Continue reading "The unusual suspects…"
arrow_forwardThis post was written by Pat Hadley, Wikimedian in Residence at York Museums Trust A volcanologist, watercolourist, botanist and forger….walk … Continue reading "The unusual suspects…"
arrow_forwardThis post was written by Dr Martin Poulter, Jisc Wikimedia ambassador Wikipedia welcomes expert contributions, and is one of the … Continue reading "Publishing scholarly papers with, and on, Wikipedia"
arrow_forwardThis post was initially published by Lorna Campbell of Cetis and is republished here under its CC-BY licence “We are all publishers now, publishing has never been … Continue reading "What I know is…"
arrow_forwardWikimania, the annual global conference of the Wikimedia movement, comes to London this year for the first time. The conference … Continue reading "Wikimania – ten days to submit your session proposal"
arrow_forwardThis post was written by Stevie Benton, Wikimedia UK’s Head of External Relations They say that the passage of time … Continue reading "Reflections on two years in post"
arrow_forwardPeter Murray-Rust is a chemist at the University of Cambridge and a vocal campaigner for open knowledge. He will be speaking at … Continue reading "Wikipedia and the Digital Enlightenment"
arrow_forwardThis post was written by Tom Morton, Wikimedia UK developer Wikimedia UK’s main websites are now available over IPv6 . For … Continue reading "IPv6 enabled on Wikimedia UK’s websites"
arrow_forwardToday is the 25th anniversary of the founding of the world wide web. The BBC reported that Sir Tim Berners-Lee has used this landmark to … Continue reading "On a Bill of Rights for the world wide web"
arrow_forwardThis post was written by Michael Maggs, Chair of Wikimedia UK I am very pleased to be able to announce … Continue reading "Announcing Wikimedia UK’s new five year strategy"
arrow_forwardThis post was initially published on the Jisc Inform website here Wikipedia is meant to be a starting point, not a final source of knowledge. It is permanently incomplete and evolving, … Continue reading "Ten ways educators can use Wikipedia"
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