Photo: Flickr user lifeontheedge

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Oh wow. This is pretty fucking cool.

Live anonymous edits to wikipepdia on a google map in realtime. The map jumps over to the new location every time there's an edit.

Seriously, it's that *singing angels* moment, like having your finger on the beating heart of the world.

Somebody in the United Arab Emirates just added some local history on a town in India. What's going on:

1. A huge proportion of the english-speakers in the world are from Indiacite, so their edits will show up in a random sample.

2. Dubai draws most of its construction workforce from india and south asia. It's around 11 a.m. there now, but I have no idea how one of the workers got access to a computer. Maybe someone's helping him out? (Or maybe the edit really came from india and the geolocator was wrong.)

Worth noting:

[This is not] a statistically representative sample of wikipedia edits...There are many biases introduced. We only see anonymous edits. We only see edits from IP addresses that could be located. If the location found is very generic (such as European Union), then it is not visualized at all. Hopefully WikiPediaVision still captures a general sense of what people are thinking about all over the world.


Still, WikiPediaVision helped me rescue an article posted from somewhere in north india.

3 comments:

pfctdayelise said...

That is madly cool.

Anonymous said...

Yes, that is pretty cool. Wikiblog has also done a review of it (http://heebie.co.uk/wikiblog/).

heebie said...

WikiBlog, to HTML'ify it for you.