Mycomp, linking single years is not an improvement. Now, would you please, please read
MOS:UNLINKYEARS? And, while there, would you also please have a look over other sections of the
WP:MOS? Thank you.
Dahn (
talk)
05:59, 6 February 2009 (UTC)reply
There are many elementary grammatical mistakes, among other things. I wish I had the time to fix them all, but I don't. I already did my best (take a look at how the article was written before I rewrote it).--
Mycomp (
talk)
08:17, 6 August 2009 (UTC)reply
Thanks for uploading File:Ion-carja-intoarcerea.png. The image description page currently specifies that the image is non-free and may only be used on Wikipedia under a
claim of fair use. However, the image is currently
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You may add it back if you think that that will be useful. However, please note that images for which a replacement could be created are not acceptable for use on Wikipedia (see
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If you have uploaded other unlicensed media, please check whether they're used in any articles or not. You can find a list of "file" pages you have edited by clicking on the "
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criteria for speedy deletion. Thank you.
FileBot (
talk)
22:54, 21 August 2009 (UTC)reply
Unreferenced BLPs
Hello Mycomp! Thank you for your contributions. I am a
bot alerting you that 5 of the articles that you created are tagged as
Unreferenced Biographies of Living Persons. The
biographies of living persons policy requires that all personal or potentially controversial information be sourced. In addition, to insure
verifiability, all biographies should be based on
reliable sources. if you were to bring these articles up to standards, it would greatly help us with the current 866 article backlog. Once the articles are adequately referenced, please remove the {{unreferencedBLP}} tag. Here is the list:
It was probably from the article on the director
Nobuhiko Obayashi, but I don't know if that's the official English title. If there is none, you're right, the article should be under the original Japanese name.–
Cattustalk12:39, 2 April 2010 (UTC)reply
Hello, Mycomp. I've just come across this article, which you created years ago. It still needs references, but I know nothing about the person. Can you help?
Markiewp (
talk)
19:50, 19 August 2010 (UTC)reply
Not all stoops are due to osteoporosis. See this article, for example, in the Annuals of the Rheumatic Diseases (1996)
[2]. It is nothing but pure speculation to conclude from looking at a single photo of a woman walking on the street that she has osteoporosis. At least the caption has to be changed to something like "A stooped back is often the result of osteoporosis".--
Mycomp (
talk)
06:43, 13 January 2011 (UTC)reply
Hi. No, I hadn't. If it's okay by you, I'll add from it when I have more time (I have to run now). Still, my view is that we should keep both accounts of the incident in the text: not that the other one, indirectly sourced from Flacara, has much credibility, but it serves to show that they didn't like him much either - in my book, that is a badge of honor :).
Dahn (
talk)
13:10, 13 September 2011 (UTC)reply
Hello, I'm
BracketBot. I have automatically detected that
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Gyula Lóránt may have broken the
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title=Gestorben Gyula Lorant|publisher=[[Der Spiegel]]|language=German|accessdate=September 4, 2013]]}}</ref>
Why state his full name in the death section, its about one individual. And his family wasn't riding with him on the motorcycle and the article doesn't even mention his family, and assuming he has more than one wife, just say wife. Thanks.
Tandrum (
talk)
03:24, 21 September 2014 (UTC)reply
It is preferable to use the individual's family name in the first sentence of a new chapter (see featured biographical articles); and as his family is still alive, in English it should be "is survived" not "was survived" (look at the obituaries in newspapers); also, in careful English it is correct to say "he is survived by his wife" (gives 11,300,000 googlits), not "he is survived by wife" (327,000 googlits).--
Mycomp (
talk)
07:17, 21 September 2014 (UTC)reply
Generally speaking, Romanians' knowledge about the United States is not especially accurate. (Of course, Americans know even less about Romania, but that's another story.) So, regarding any Romanian source dealing with the US, it's a good idea to try and back up some of the information from American sources.
We are editors, not scribes; we take reliable sources and shape them into articles, but we never assume those sources are infallible. It's absolutely appropriate to stop and question something if it doesn't seem right.
As it turns out, there's very good reason to question what RL has to say in this situation. Because there's no such thing as the
American Society for the History of Culture. I don't think this point needs to be belabored, but an organization that existed in 1974 and had some minimal relevance would be mentioned somewhere on the Internet - on a website, in a newspaper, in a book. The fact that there's nothing is strongly indicative that there's something odd going on here.
While we're at it, what is this "National Book Fair" in Los Angeles? I can find reference to several book fairs in that city, but none that precisely matches.
In sum: it's perfectly possible that Chimet did receive some sort of award in Los Angeles in 1974 (or '73, as some searches indicate). But the source doesn't give an accurate account of what transpired, and until we do have that picture, it's best not to include the detail. (Plus, since it sounds like
advertorial language from the book's back cover, it's questionable whether it should be included even if we do clarify the situation, but right now, clarification is a must.) -
BiruitorulTalk01:19, 21 November 2014 (UTC)reply
Sorry, but I'm not convinced by your arguments. What you imply is that we editors can question a reliable source arbitrarily- when we agree with it, we use the info, when we don't, we delete it. If a leading Romanian literary weekly,
Romania literara, a reliable source as you yourself have agreed, says that his book got the award, we can use that info, I suppose. Whether you or I have ever heard or not of the "American Society for the History of Culture" or of the National Book Fair (which is a translation of "Tîrgul Național al Cărții" as it is in Romanian in the source) is irrelevant. There was actually a National Book Fair in Los Angeles, the first one taking place in 1936, but if it is the same one or not is again completely irrelevant to this discussion. Just because things cannot be found with a search engine does not mean that they are false, but again, this is also irrelevant. If, let's say, the New York Review of Books said that a certain American book had won a prize in 1974 at a book fair in Romania, would you delete that information too, because Americans don't know much about Romania, and you can't find anything about it on the net?
I repeat from
WP:VNT, "editors are not making judgments as to what is true and what is false, but what can be verified in a reliable source" because your idea of common sense might not match mine. So, it all boils down to whether "Romania literara" is a reliable source or not, I guess.--
Mycomp (
talk)
03:32, 21 November 2014 (UTC)reply
First, let me restate my main contention: any entity of any significance active in the United States in 1974 will have some kind of Internet presence. It could be trivial, it could be passing, but there's going to be something. While the WWW didn't exist in 1974, there were plenty of books being published, while print newspapers and magazines still had a mass readership. Some of that is still offline, but a good part of it has been digitized. I mean, the
Town of West Greenwich (population 1841 in 1970) gets
five hits - for books published in 1973-74 alone. Yet the "American Society for the History of Culture", supposedly a nationwide organization, only gets one hit, and that in a Romanian magazine?
Occam's razor starts to kick in.
Now, on to subsidiary matters. No, it's not arbitrary to question a source if there seems to be a good reason for questioning it. It actually can't do any harm. If we find corroborating information, then the source is probably accurate and our question was for nothing. If we don't and we expect it, then yes, that might point to a problem with the source. After all, every source is potentially fallible. I have no problem with RL - I've cited it myself on a number of occasions. But even they make mistakes, such as printing the name of an organization that is nowhere else to be found. And no, the standard I'm using is not whether I've heard of something, but whether Google has. Big difference. Given the vast size of what Google has indexed and what's been uploaded to Google Books, and given that the US of 1974 was an advanced and highly literate society, yes, the utter lack of hits is relevant.
There are a few American (and British) scholars of Romania I trust implicitly - Keith Hitchins, Tom Gallagher, Dennis Deletant, Katherine Verdery, etc. - but outside that narrow band, certainly my impulse would be to check an American source on Romania against a Romanian one.
If you still disagree, you may wish to consider
WP:3O.
As for Ştefăniţă Regman: a "researcher" is not necessarily a university professor with a doctorate. There is, for example, such a thing as
undergraduate research. There are also high school teachers who carefully study documents and assemble them into books published by prestigious outfits like Editura Curtea Veche, and prepare articles for peer-reviewed magazines such as, well, România literară. Regman, for example. -
BiruitorulTalk05:38, 22 November 2014 (UTC)reply