Welcome to Wikimedia Commons, JRennocks!

-- Wikimedia Commons Welcome (talk) 10:00, 18 April 2020 (UTC)Reply

Notification about possible deletion edit

 
Some contents have been listed at Commons:Deletion requests so that the community can discuss whether they should be kept or not. We would appreciate it if you could go to voice your opinion about this at their entry.

If you created these pages, please note that the fact that they have been proposed for deletion does not necessarily mean that we do not value your kind contribution. It simply means that one person believes that there is some specific problem with them, such as a copyright issue. Please see Commons:But it's my own work! for a guide on how to address these issues.

Please remember to respond to and – if appropriate – contradict the arguments supporting deletion. Arguments which focus on the nominator will not affect the result of the nomination. Thank you!

Affected:

And also:

Yours sincerely, -mattbuck (Talk) 08:40, 30 August 2020 (UTC)Reply

Please enable e-mail to be eligible to win a prize in Wiki Loves Monuments! edit

 

Thank you for uploading images for Wiki Loves Monuments!

However, we have noticed you have not enabled e-mail. To be eligible to win a prize the contest, you need to enable e-mail. This is what to do:

  1. Check the top right of your screen, and log in if you have not done so already
  2. Go to your preferences
  3. Scroll down to Email Options
  4. Enter your email address and click "Allow other users to email me"
  5. Click Save

Please test new feature on the ISA Tool (computer-aided tagging) edit

Hello


We have just released a new version of the ISA tool on the Test Server. The new version propose semi-automatic tagging of images, which seeks to assist community in identifying and labelling depicts statements for Commons files.

We are currently looking for feedback with regards to the look, feel, and usability of the tool with the machine vision / metadata-to-concept enhancements in place. In a second stage, we will be testing the quality of the recommandations provided.

We deeply appreciate your feedback, since it will help us determine the next steps of the project.

Please sign-up to indicate interest, test the tool, and simply provide feedback in the talk page.

More information on the new feature and test campaign: Commons:ISA Tool/Image to Concept

Thank you in advanceǃ


User:Anthere

ISA Tool Workshop - Dec 12th 2022 edit

Greetings.

We released a few weeks ago a new version of the ISA tool on the Test Server. The new version propose semi-automatic tagging of images, which seeks to assist community in identifying and labelling depicts statements for Commons files.

Now we are looking for feedback with regards to

  • the look, feel, and usability of the tool with the machine vision / metadata-to-concept enhancements in place.
  • and most importantly, the quality of the recommandations provided.

This is why we are organizing an online workshop on Monday 12th of December, 16h-17h30 UTC+1 (on zoom). We will be very happy if you find the time to join us.

More information and sign-up : https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:ISA_Tool/Image_to_Concept#ISA_Workshop_-_Dec_12th

Thank you in advanceǃ

User:Anthere

Thank you for participating in Wiki Loves Monuments 2022! Please help with this survey edit

 
Wiki Loves Monuments logo

Dear JRennocks,

Thank you for contributing to Wiki Loves Monuments 2022, and for sharing your pictures with the whole world! We would like to ask again for a few minutes of your time. Thanks to the participation of people like you, the contest gathered more than 150K+ pictures of cultural heritage objects from more than 35 countries around the world.

You can find all your pictures in your upload log, and are of course very welcome to keep uploading images and help develop Wikimedia Commons, even though you will not be able to win more prizes (just yet). To make future contests even more successful than this year, we would like to invite you to share your experiences with us in a short survey.

Please fill in this short survey and help us learn what you liked and didn't like about Wiki Loves Monuments 2022.

Kind regards, Wiki Loves Monuments team, 09:38, 10 January 2023 (UTC)

Westminster Abbey photo of transept. edit

JRennocks,

You have just innocently sparked total fury in the mind of an elderly art history lecturer, and previously a major contributor to articles on architecture. Some years ago, I tried to put Wikimedia editors right about a certain matter, but they went right on regardless and the problem, in consequence has multiplied, probably beyond repair. The correct term for the front of a church, of any type is the "front". Not "facade" ...... unless it actually IS a facade. For example, one could call the front of St Peter's Bailica its facade. But at Westminster Abbey, it is most definitely NOT a facade; it is the West Front. And when writing about it one would generally use caps as I have here.

So the IDIOTS on Wikimedia, liking a fancy word, swept through and changed every aspect of every building to "facade". This means that when you see a picture of the north SIDE of great French cathedral, all propped up with its exposed buttresses and flying buttresses, like the structures that you see when tou are looking at the back of stage scenery, at the theatre ..... all these SIDE VIEWS are mow wrongly labelled "facade". They are NOT facades. A facade is a FACE. It is like a mask on he front of a building. It may or may not tell you what lies inside. Even writers on stately homes generally refer to the buildings as having "fronts" and "sides". There is NOTHING that can turn the side view of a church into a "facade".

At Westminster Abbey, and at SOME other great churches, the end of the transept has a "front". What you are looking at here is NOT the "North facade" and it is NOT the "Noth front" either. It is specifically, the "North transept front". because, in the north side of the building the only part that has a "front" is the transept. The reason that it has a "front" is that this is one of the major entries to the building. It is the entry from Parliament Square. York Minster has a "front" on the south transept, but not on the north. The cathedrals of Wells, Salisbury, Ely, Peterborough etc etc do not have transept fronts; they just have "ends" which may or may not have a useful door, but no grand "portal"

Transept "fronts" are relatively common in France e.g. at Chartres.

So, as you see, I am thoroughly pissed off about the fact that ignorance has prevailed, and that futhermore, it is now being wrongly applied to my correctly-labelled contribution. Amandajm (talk) 14:00, 28 March 2023 (UTC)Reply

Round 1 of Picture of the Year 2022 voting is open! edit

 
2022 Picture of the Year: Saint John Church of Sohrol in Iran.

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Dear Wikimedian,

Wikimedia Commons is happy to announce that the 2022 Picture of the Year competition is now open. This year will be the seventeenth edition of the annual Wikimedia Commons photo competition, which recognizes exceptional contributions by users on Wikimedia Commons. Wikimedia users are invited to vote for their favorite images featured on Commons during the last year (2022) to produce a single Picture of the Year.

Hundreds of images that have been rated Featured Pictures by the international Wikimedia Commons community in the past year are all entered in this competition. These images include professional animal and plant shots, breathtaking panoramas and skylines, restorations of historical images, photographs portraying the world's best architecture, impressive human portraits, and so much more.

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You are receiving this message because you voted in the 2021 Picture of the Year contest.

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Round 2 of Picture of the Year 2022 voting is open! edit

 

Read this message in your language

Dear Wikimedian,

You are receiving this message because we noticed that you voted in Round 1 of the 2022 Picture of the Year contest, but not yet in the second round. Wikimedia users are invited to vote for their favorite images featured on Commons during the last year (2022) to produce a single Picture of the Year.

Hundreds of images that have been rated Featured Pictures by the international Wikimedia Commons community in the past year were entered in this competition. These images include professional animal and plant shots, breathtaking panoramas and skylines, restorations of historical images, photographs portraying the world's best architecture, impressive human portraits, and so much more.

In this second and final round, you may vote for a maximum of three images. The image with the most votes will become the Picture of the Year 2022.

Round 2 will end at UTC.

Click here to vote now!

Thanks,
the Wikimedia Commons Picture of the Year committee

Delivered by MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 07:45, 5 May 2023 (UTC)Reply