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I used to be a sysop of a wiki site. One of the things you really have to watch for is that wikis tend to attract twenty tons of spam. Wiki spammers are far worse and more persistant than forum spammers because most wikis are more liberal about links. Wikimedia anti-spam tools are in my opinion much weaker. The only reason the large wikis get away with it (ie: wikipedia, rational wiki, conservapaedia, ED) is merely the sheer number of editors watching the pages day and night with auto-protect buttons ready. More link-tos = better SEO for what ever rip off spam site, so they do have motivation.I would suggest if you do put a wiki up, you limit the ability to edit to folks who request permission.Plus, sisko is right. Wikimedia requires it's own maintainence on top of your forum.
Quote from: Green1 on December 01, 2012, 01:19:15 AMI used to be a sysop of a wiki site. One of the things you really have to watch for is that wikis tend to attract twenty tons of spam. Wiki spammers are far worse and more persistant than forum spammers because most wikis are more liberal about links. Wikimedia anti-spam tools are in my opinion much weaker. The only reason the large wikis get away with it (ie: wikipedia, rational wiki, conservapaedia, ED) is merely the sheer number of editors watching the pages day and night with auto-protect buttons ready. More link-tos = better SEO for what ever rip off spam site, so they do have motivation.I would suggest if you do put a wiki up, you limit the ability to edit to folks who request permission.Plus, sisko is right. Wikimedia requires it's own maintainence on top of your forum.I created and ran a fairly large wiki for over a year. Mediawiki has plenty of effective anti-spam measures (regex black/white lists for urls, a load of different capachas on edit or registration, and really easy ways to delete any spam), and should easily be configureable to use the forum's spam resistance (make the drone usergroup unable to edit, only a spambot which was able to spam on forum can spam there). Some wikis do not make best use of the anti spam tools available, which does, unsurprisingly, lead to spam problems. I can advise on (or, with access, help configure) ways to prevent almost all spam. Limiting to people who request permission is a totally unnecessary hurdle for editors and administrative burden.
Just found a link to http://alphacentauri.us/fac-tool/rate.htm.
Yea, wiki's without someone around to handle the tech stuff (installing and configuring extensions mostly) tend to fall into disrepair.It would be excellent to have an active editor who already knows their way around mediawiki like you around from the start. Some ideas beyond custom/official faction profiles I've been thinking over:With not huge effort (a few regex find/replaces to sort out links, maybe manually setting up titles), I should be able to get the modified datalinks into a format we can mass import into the wiki automatically. That'll give us a good base, even if it will still need some work.I found that Vel's guide was released into public domain, so we could use parts of that if we wanted to. But if there are people willing to write specifically for the wiki (faction descriptions, etc) that would be cool.sisko, I'm going to be fairly inactive for some time around christmas, but if you can get it running (even with no extensions/styling) by the 11th-12th I should have a few days to focus on setting it up.
Quote from: ete on December 04, 2012, 01:28:29 PMJust found a link to http://alphacentauri.us/fac-tool/rate.htm.Link doesn't work. Fixed link. (You put the period inside the hyperlink, which of course makes it not work.)And scout copters are at least somewhat useful. Robust economy is literally useless.I'd be interested in seeing a fixed version, as it might give some ideas as to what needs balancing among social engineering. I know that industry is too powerful (I presume primarily due to crawlers, with a tendency toward small bases (and thus a need for a lot of facilities) causing substantial effects on that front as well.)
I have looked at a few game wikis. One of the problems I found is it is really hard on some of the smaller ones to actually get to the info you need. Now, if it is a gigantic game with thousands of link-to pages like Wowwiki, yeah, you ca do it like wikipedia.However, for a smaller niche deal like this would be I think the front page should be like a Table of Contents-like structure. Under each anchor article you would have sub articles dealing with that topic. For example, you have a main Miriam page in ToC which would give all the canon info about Miriam. Under that though, series of all the articles we could find (or write) from strategy with Miriam to even commentaries on Miriam. Of course, lets not be dicks and DO give the original source and credit if it is not our own.Network Node factions would be the same way with comments on completeness, ridiculousness, and what theme it falls under.