Airgun mish-mash on Wikipedia
Moderators: pilkguns, m1963, David Levene, Spencer, Richard H
Airgun mish-mash on Wikipedia
Could someone with time and wiki knowledge please go to the wikipedia airgun entry and straighten them out about single stroke pneumatics!?! I cringed when I read the entry. Oh - and adding a link to Target Talk would probably be a good thing too.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_gun#Si ... ic_airguns
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_gun#Si ... ic_airguns
the world has come to a point where youngsters do not take wikipedia with a pinch of salt.
the whole concept is that even if something is wrong, a knowlegable person will correct it thus making wikipedia accurate. so since we can see the mistake we have a responsibility to correct it to prevent people from being misled.
im trying to correct it where i can but i find my lack of real knowledge disturbing. can someone help me?
the whole concept is that even if something is wrong, a knowlegable person will correct it thus making wikipedia accurate. so since we can see the mistake we have a responsibility to correct it to prevent people from being misled.
im trying to correct it where i can but i find my lack of real knowledge disturbing. can someone help me?
Hasn't the "self correcting" fallacy been demonstrated (since at least 1980) in every newsgroup on the internet?
So we assume that a different chat room/newsgroup format is automatically going to be more accurate just because . . . ?
Steve Swartz
(Responsible college professors are adopting policies of substantive point penalties for any use of "wiki" as authoritative material. Unless, of course, the study is on "wiki" itself. Wiki is somewhat below the National Enquirer as source material. Almost as low as the New York Times!)
So we assume that a different chat room/newsgroup format is automatically going to be more accurate just because . . . ?
Steve Swartz
(Responsible college professors are adopting policies of substantive point penalties for any use of "wiki" as authoritative material. Unless, of course, the study is on "wiki" itself. Wiki is somewhat below the National Enquirer as source material. Almost as low as the New York Times!)
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Has anyone read the Wiki on ISSF/Oly shooting?
the first time I read that I found it well written with satisfactory info for a general audience
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISSF_shooting_events
the few other times where I have searched for general info on guns and some electronic things, I have found the Wiki to be easy to read and no less accurate than other online sources
also, I remember reading recently a report that Wiki was not substantially less accurate then established mainstream encyclopedias
Poole
an example:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB
the first time I read that I found it well written with satisfactory info for a general audience
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISSF_shooting_events
the few other times where I have searched for general info on guns and some electronic things, I have found the Wiki to be easy to read and no less accurate than other online sources
also, I remember reading recently a report that Wiki was not substantially less accurate then established mainstream encyclopedias
Poole
an example:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB
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I just had a very quick look and it doesn't seem far off. The only mistake I spotted is in the section headed "History and admittance of new events".Bill Poole wrote:Has anyone read the Wiki on ISSF/Oly shooting?
It talks about one new event for 5 shot air pistols. There are of course 2 new event types in section 8.20 of the rules, the Five Target Event and the Air Pistol Standard event. To describe either of these as a "10 m version of Rapid Fire Pistol" is probably stretching things a bit.
If the overlap between "Wikipedia" and "factual" were in some way reliable, then your point would apply.
While having "factual" data widely available is A Good Thing, having unsubstantiated and unverified "data" widely available is just One More Modern Problem.
Diogenes need not shine his lamp on Wikipedia.
Steve Swartz
While having "factual" data widely available is A Good Thing, having unsubstantiated and unverified "data" widely available is just One More Modern Problem.
Diogenes need not shine his lamp on Wikipedia.
Steve Swartz
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If Steve Swartz were to write an article about shooting on Wiki and have a coupla of us here review it, I think it would be as accurate as anything readily available, and probably more accurate within our narrow specialty than almost anything mainstream.If the overlap between "Wikipedia" and "factual" were in some way reliable
I think wiki has the potential to be very good, if the individual articles are written by experts in the field who try writing, rather than writers who try interviewing experts in the field
but maybe i'm being overly optimistic and naive
Poole
http://arizona.rifleshooting.com/
His point does apply because if you think journalists have enough time to do extensive background checks on the reliability of data, you've not been watching the news, reading the newspapers or looking at any news media for a few decades. Edward Murrow's spirit is long dead :(Steve Swartz wrote:If the overlap between "Wikipedia" and "factual" were in some way reliable, then your point would apply.
So, if journalists are going to take any source they can get, and the wikipedia is one of them, and we can ensure the wikipages are well-written, then isn't it an opportunity for us to seize?