WikiIndex:RecentChanges patrol: Difference between revisions

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:: If a person can control her own edits, I'm a bit unclear on the usefulness of using the feature at all. [[TedErnst]] | <small>[[User talk:TedErnst|talk]]</small> 12:30, 8 Mar 2006 (EST)
:: If a person can control her own edits, I'm a bit unclear on the usefulness of using the feature at all. [[TedErnst]] | <small>[[User talk:TedErnst|talk]]</small> 12:30, 8 Mar 2006 (EST)
:::The usual "rebuttal" to this objection is that most trolls are either too inexperienced to know about this or are too stupid to think of this. Besides, it;s restricted to logged in users. Also, a few recent changes lurkers I know ''never'' "patrol" edits for just that very reason. It is, though, helpful in checking content for accuracy, or typos. Typos would be a big thing in projects like the mass creation of pages for every known wiki which Mark's been doing lately. Those edits are rerely more than 2 minutes apart and at one point I saw recent changes completely filled with it. From personal experience I know that you can get going at a pretty good pace on projects like this, so typos (sometimes major) are bound to happen, and with 3 or 4 people going behinf you on recent changes as long as they're not doing redundant work, nobody has to spend much time making sure that the project is ''truly'' complete when you're finished. &mdash;[[Sean Fennel|<span style="font-family: Kristen ITC, Times New Roman;">User:Sean Fennel</span>]][[User talk:Sean Fennel|<span style="font-family: Kristen ITC, Times New Roman;">@</span>]] 12:59, 8 Mar 2006 (EST)


== members ==
== members ==

Revision as of 17:59, 8 March 2006

This page is for those that want to patrol recent changes to swap tips, share experiences, ask questions, and coordinate any collaboration that needs to happen. This is a work in progress. Please help!

patrol recent changes

Does everyone know about the red exclamation marks in recent changes? It appears not, so let me explain. This is MediaWiki's "RC Patrol" feature. (This is only for logged in users) On the recent changes page, view and edit by clicking "(diff)" after the name of the edited article. after viewing the diff, click "[Mark as patrolled]", then "Return to Special:Recentchanges.". Notice that there is no longer a red exclamation mark next to the edit you just "patrolled". This tells other recent changes lurkers that somebody has looked that edit over, or "patrolled" it. When a wiki gets really busy, like the Homestar Runner Wiki tends to do on Monday mornings (because that's when homestarrunner.com is usually updated), this greatly helps reduce redundant efforts by the members of the "Recent Changes Committee". Wikipedia has this turned off (there are so many edits so quickly there that it would be pretty much impossible to keep up), so if most people aren't going to use it we could do that as well. Those exclamation marks were designed to be annoying — and they are, so I suggest we do one of the two pronto. —User:Sean Fennel@ 12:16, 3 Mar 2006 (EST)

Sean, is there any way to "auto-patrol" admins or other trusted people? It's really a pain to have to patrol Mark and Ray's edits, for example. TedErnst | talk 13:57, 7 Mar 2006 (EST)
You can mark your own edits as patrolled. I think that this undermines the benefit of marking edits as patrolled. Patrolling should mean that someone else sees and reviews the edit. Tristram Shandy 17:17, 7 Mar 2006 (EST)
I agree, Tristram. That appears to be a big. Sean? Any words of wisdom on that one? TedErnst | talk 17:57, 7 Mar 2006 (EST)
I'm pretty sure it's either all or nothing. —User:Sean Fennel@ 03:40, 8 Mar 2006 (EST)
If a person can control her own edits, I'm a bit unclear on the usefulness of using the feature at all. TedErnst | talk 12:30, 8 Mar 2006 (EST)
The usual "rebuttal" to this objection is that most trolls are either too inexperienced to know about this or are too stupid to think of this. Besides, it;s restricted to logged in users. Also, a few recent changes lurkers I know never "patrol" edits for just that very reason. It is, though, helpful in checking content for accuracy, or typos. Typos would be a big thing in projects like the mass creation of pages for every known wiki which Mark's been doing lately. Those edits are rerely more than 2 minutes apart and at one point I saw recent changes completely filled with it. From personal experience I know that you can get going at a pretty good pace on projects like this, so typos (sometimes major) are bound to happen, and with 3 or 4 people going behinf you on recent changes as long as they're not doing redundant work, nobody has to spend much time making sure that the project is truly complete when you're finished. —User:Sean Fennel@ 12:59, 8 Mar 2006 (EST)

members

Put your name here if you plan to participate in the RecentChanges Patrol!