On 5 Oct 2010, at 18:48, [email protected] wrote:

> What is the main point of wikipedia to edit it, or to read it? Because 
> the readability of something like the Bulger article is very low. Making 
> it easier to edit with peppered refs will probably mean that more refs 
> get added making it less readable.
> 
> NOTE: when reading an article or a book one rarely looks at the 
> references. They are, in the main, a distraction.

I disagree completely; if I'm reading a non-fiction book, I find the references 
very useful, and wish that they were easier to track down. I find the ease of 
access of Wikipedia's references absolutely vital in its role as a starting 
point for research, as well as a double-check of where the information comes 
from. This is possibly due to my more academic background (I'm used to reading 
papers with lots of references, although I much prefer Harvard-style to the 
numbered style that Wikipedia uses), so I'm not saying that this is a widely 
held viewpoint, but bear in mind that there is a wide spectrum here. The 
references are there in articles or books for a reason. ;-)

BTW, if anyone's not tried using navigation popups to read references while 
reading an article, then you're really missing out - it's fantastic:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Tools/Navigation_popups

Mike Peel


_______________________________________________
foundation-l mailing list
[email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l

Reply via email to