Tuesday, April 29, 2008

ArmchairGM, the ultimate community of sports fans



In honor of the debut of ABC's World Wide of Sports in 1961 on this date, today I've selected the ArmchairGM wiki as my wiki-of-the-day.

ArmchairGM, based on MediaWiki, aims to be the ultimate community of sports fans. It includes articles on sports in many categories, including baseball, basketball, football, soccer, ice hockey, auto racing, golf, cycling, olympic events, combat sports, extreme sports,water sports, horse races, and many more! Writers of articles within this sports encyclopedia can embed flash videos (such as YouTube video clips). Unlike some encyclopedias, fans on ArmchairGM may write Opinions describing what they think about different sports-related topics.

Any and all sports fans are welcome to join the ArmchairGM community and contribute. Community members can post to the community blog -- articles are filtered by the community. Articles with enough votes appear front-and-center on ArmchairGM and hit the RSS feed. ArmchairGM lets fans rate "virtually anything in the sports world" and also make it easy for its fans to grab the ratings and stick them elsewhere. Fans on ArmchairGM can get recognition through points for virtually every activity on the site. Top fans are honored on an ongoing, monthly, and weekly basis. Fans can advance up levels, starting as Little Leaguers and up to the Legends level.

ArmchairGM has been described as an example of Wiki 2.0, combining the features of open source wiki software with social networking features. Each fan can build a profile and include their own photo galleries. Fans may join networks of other fans of their favorite teams. They can meet new people and add friends. Likewise, it also has a counterpart where you can add a fan to your network of foes. It also has a virtual gift component where little icons can be sent to another fan with a personal message (e.g., tissues for team losses, asterisk for accolades). Fans can also create gifts themselves by uploading images.

ArmchairGM has been quite successful. It was acquired by Wikia for $2 million. In March 2008, the Sports Illustrated site SI.com added to its new SI Vault section the "SI Wiki" which is powered by ArmchairGM. This wiki has obviously been found "worthy enough and rich with information" of being the sports wiki for SI.com.

For those who celebrate the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat, visit the ArmchairGM wiki, join the community, and jump right in!

Monday, April 28, 2008

Wiki resources for mathematics education

Today, in celebration of Math Education Month, I set out on a quest to find wikis devoted to mathematics and math education. I was pleasantly surprised to find numerous wikis that have been created on these topics. I found wikis with resources for teachers of mathematics. I also found wikis developed by classes and schools to share information about their mathematics curriculum or courses. I've posted in this blog post a few examples of the wikis I found.


Resources for Mathematics Teachers:
k12wiki - Effective Math Videos, a site which includes links to videos that can be used in teaching mathematics
PlanetMath.Org's mathematics encyclopedia , "Math for the people, by the people"
Wikibooks: Mathematics bookshelf, For those looking for some more traditional resources for teaching math, check out the math textbooks collection on Wikibooks
Wikiversity: Mathematics Portal, for learning resources on various topics in mathematics developed in various Wikiversity content development projects

Examples of how schools are using wikis for math education:
All About Math at Marstons Mills East Horace Mann Charter Public School, an example wiki developed about the mathematics curriculum at one K-4 school
Primary math, a wiki set up for primary classes (K-2) to share their math learning with other classes around the world
York University's Department of Mathematics and Statistics wiki site

I also found a wiki for those in the academic mathematics job market:
Notable Mathematics Wiki

Today, I hope that you see the variety of wiki sites that can be created on a topic and the variety of wiki user groups

Image credit: Robert Fant's math wiki

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Wikicartoon, the free cartoon encyclopedia

In celebration of Daffy Duck's first appearance on this date in 1937, I started my search for a wiki related to cartoons. I first found Wikicartoon. It is hosted on Wikia. It was started on February 3, 2006. The home page notes that they are currently working on 107 articles. It appears to have been idle for awhile recently, but there's been some activity lately. Five new pages have been created in 2008, but there have only been 8 changes during the last 30 days and none of those within the last two weeks. The wiki could definitely use some help. It currently has at least 1,000 items on its wanted pages list. There's no page devoted to Daffy Duck yet on the wiki, but Daffy is mentioned on the Warner Brothers Cartoons and Looney Tunes wiki pages.

If you've spent a lot time on the cartoon networks, have fond memories of the cartoons of your childhood, or enjoy watching them even today, stop by Wikicartoon, join its community and lend a hand. Hey, why not surprise your kids and spend some quality time with them watching cartoons this week, for research to help on Wikicartoon?

Image credit: Wikia

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

No loss for words with Wiktionary

In celebration of the publishing of Samuel Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language on this date in 1755, I've selected Wiktionary as my wiki-of-the-day.

Wiktionary is just one of the many projects run by the Wikimedia Foundation, which also runs Wikipedia, probably the most famous wiki of all. Wiktionary has 782,480 entries with English definitions. Wiktionary has grown beyond a standard dictionary. It now includes a thesaurus, a rhyme guide, phrasebooks, and language statistics. In addition to definitions, it includes entymologies, pronunciations, sample quotations, synonyms, antonyms, and translations.

If you're at a loss for the right words, then try out Wiktionary. Also, if you have a huge vocabulary with no problems completing crossword challenges, you might be challenged by the Wiktionary requested entries page. Today, think about lending a hand and contribute to this wiki project.

Image credit: Wikimedia Commons

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Uncyclopedia, the content-free encyclopedia that anyone can edit

In celebration of April Fools Day, the wiki-of-the-day is Uncyclopedia.

Uncyclopedia has over 23,000 articles, but don't let a link to this encyclopedia ever fool you. There is one statement in the wiki that they claim to be true: "Uncyclopedia is an encyclopedia full of misinformation and lies." Uncyclopedia is a satire of an encyclopedia, a parady of Wikipedia. The folks at Uncyclopedia say they are dedicated to humour, satire, and generally funny things -- but they aren't fond of stupid. It includes HTBFANJS advice to writers on how to be funny and not just stupid. Uncyclopedia stresses a "satirical point of view" (compared to Wikipedia's NPOV or neutral point of view). It stresses both good writing and good behavior. It also has a Pee Review (that's no typo either) process for requesting writing help and criticsm where other members review an article and then provide constructive feedback and tips to make it better. It also includes several UnProjects, including UnBooks, UnNews, Undictionary, Unquotable, and UnTunes. Its UnNews section is a source for up-to-the-minute misinformation. A top news article today is about Adam Carolla announcing the production of "Drinking with the Stars!" which is scheduled to begin this weekend at Jimmy Kimmel's house.

Well, Uncyclopedia qualifies as a wiki-of-the-day on my adventure to find wiki'd places on the Web on some of the target qualities: it's interesting, amusing, and entertaining -- but (you've been warned!) don't count on it being informative.