Re: Re: Recommended Ref
- Subject: Re: Re: Recommended Ref
- From: &* P* &* <r*@embarqmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 6 Jun 2013 11:15:07 -0400 (EDT)
Any errors on the wiki are there because people complain, but do not report them. If several SIGNA members wanted to monitor species information on the wiki they could have the wiki setting send them any changes just in the species web.
Presently Dennis pretty much has to put up everything on the SIGNA website. The wiki could allow a team to do the same, accomplishing a lot more. The Wiki can be formatted to whatever format SIGNA likes. But presently all entries have a consistent template. I have repeatedly pointed out that SIGNA could do a great deal to make the species section their own.
The wiki is not freewheeling. It may reflect an alternate opinion to a particular reader. It does allow many to participate and resists anyone including myself as claiming the ultimate authority. Articles are possible and present in a few categories. I have intentions on putting up all iris information in the Biodiversity Heritage Library that refers to Iris. At present I have just linked to relevant pages. But I am only one person. I would appreciate help especially from those who choose to criticize.
Even though the SIGNA site is very small in comparison to even just the species portion of the wiki, it still has contained errors. I have not reviewed it lately but in the past I found lots of problems. There is no one authority on anything that is absolute. More and more I have been adding references to information. Different authorities disagree and the newest always has the advantage of seeing all the past. But historical information is useful and sometimes turns out to be correct.
From: "Sean Zera" <zera@umich.edu> To: iris-species@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, June 6, 2013 10:45:34 AM Subject: Re: [iris-species] Re: Recommended Ref I agree - an open wiki accumulates too many errors that may never be corrected. The AIS wiki is too big to be done otherwise, though. I've always liked the SIGNA database, but among other things I'd love to see real, honest-to-goodness range maps (difficult for many species, I know), which most references haven't tried (NANI did). I envision something sort of like this
with the taxonomy, distribution and habitat up front, with perhaps a tabbed layout separating cultivation information and history, cultivars, photos, and the like. These days we could probably get people to contribute photos of a significant number of species in their natural habitats.
Sean Z
On Thu, Jun 6, 2013 at 9:28 AM, <C*@aol.com> wrote:
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