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I sincerely doubt this is going to be the end of the Facebook era. There are way too many people using the service and only a tiny fraction of them are going to delete their profiles anytime soon.


I think it's pretty obvious that once you put your photos on your Facebook (or other social media channel) profile they are pretty much public. I don't really understand why people would upload sensitive information about themselves in the first place.


This was simply an EPIC email exchange! The blogger made some really good points there. And Steve kept his cool remarcably well, until the end. It kind of makes you wish he hadn't pulled that "what have you done that's so great" card.


That's a huge leap for him. It's true, it doesn't sound to dependable, but it might be worth the risk in the end.


This is just like Farmville, but in real life :)) No, seriously, great concept. Maybe more people will find it easier to eat health thanks to this.

Best of luck! Fabrice Talbot


I just shared the video on Twitter and LinkedIn. Great, informative video, if you ask me. It depicts both points of view.

However, I do agree that the word "semantic" has become too much of a buzzword and most people aren't really aware of it's true meaning.


Well, China just got even more amazing. I don't think the Chinese people were very affected by Google leaving. But DropBox is a very useful tool. I'm not sure it has any remarcable competititors that can relevantly fill the gap.


I agree, Flash is running pretty well on the Nexus One. This is only one of it's great features. I think I've fallen in love a bit with the Android 2.1 platform. It didn't crush once, in about 3 months.


Please tell me this was a joke :) However it reminded me of this parody: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odBDAcOEKuI


I don't know, I'm pretty ok with the way the editor is now. Maybe I've just grown accustomed to it.


I still don't know, nor can be bothered working out various different unnecessary markup languages, and I program. God forbid anyone whose talents lie elsewhere tries to contribute.


It's okay, most likely some overzealous editor will simply delete whatever that person contributes anyway. Contributing to Wikipedia as a non-editor is a massive waste of time since even minor submissions get killed quickly and quickly turn into massive fights over notoriety and content.


Contributing to Wikipedia as a non-editor

Do you mean "contributing to Wikipedia as someone without a user account"? I just started doing Wikipedia edits, having first set up a Wikipedia account, when I declared a vacation from Facebook. I like to contribute good content to the Interwebs. On Facebook, I was mostly contributing links to articles about Facebook privacy issues. While I was taking a break from Facebook, another HN participant linked to a Wikipedia article in an HN thread, and I saw an edit I could do there that would change the close-enough-for-government work word into the exactly correct word. So I made the edit. Later I made a more substantive edit and added a recent reference to a more visited and more controversial article--on a subject much discussed here on HN. Over time, I will check how well my edits are accepted. Someday I'll try posting a whole new article, when I have a sense of what is missing and have reference materials at hand. I'll evaluate my experience by how other Wikipedians respond to my edits.


No, with an account. I happen to know a bit about a few, completely unrelated areas (the area I live in, foods from a certain country, digital music composition, a couple martial arts, computer sciency stuff, etc.) that I wanted to make substantial contributions to fill those portions of wikipedia out. About 2 and a half years ago, I signed up and made an account and started dutifully filling out information, adding new articles, editing some old ones. Normal stuff.

I probably did a few hundred edits and contributed 30 or so new articles. As far as I know, not one of those things survived the first month.

I haven't even bothered after that experience. Citing the submission guidelines led to nothing.

The cabal of super-user types there that seem to want to fix wikipedia on the current status quo (unless they themselves edit something) made wikipedia at the time unbearable as a new contributer. It wasn't like there were even requests for changes or new edits (things that wouldn't have been a problem since I was new and learning the ropes) -- just deletions. Sometimes within minutes.

It wasn't even that somebody had come along and cleaned up my submissions, or provided some editing work, just....gone.

After that wonderful experience I decided to spend those few hundred hours someplace else.


While Wikipedia (especially the English version) has its problems. That statement is an exaggeration.

You're very likely to run into these issues if you contribute to certain topics. Examples include living persons, video game characters, some piece of software you wrote, or anything else that's not very notable, controversial or hard to find references for.

However for the vast majority of topics this isn't an issue. If you're just writing about a place, landmark, some historical character, a scientific discipline or any of the topics that make up ~80% of the actual content on Wikipedia you're not going to have your article listed for deletion.


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