User:Peaceray/sandbox
WikiConference North America 2022 (WCNA), November 11–13, is partnering with OpenStreetMap US's 2nd annual Mapping USA to host a virtual event celebrating the OpenStreetMap and Wiki communities of North America. Mapping USA will start with their Mappy Hour on Thursday, November 10, 8–9pm ET. The joint conference will continue with a half day of talks on Friday, and a day of workshops, birds of a feather sessions, local meetups, editathons, and mapathons on Saturday. WCNA 2022 will continue with an unconference and other programming events on Sunday, November 13.
Friday, November 11, 14:00–19:00
Please note: this program is still in development as speakers are confirmed and is subject to change.
Time (Eastern Time, UTC−5) |
Session Info |
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14:00–14:20 | Welcome to Mapping USA + WikiConference NorthAmerica |
Opening Keynote: The Case for Sister Projects
Minh Nguyễn
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14:20 – 14:25 | Break |
14:25 – 15:25 | At 18 years old, is OSM entering adulthood?
Jennings Anderson & Martijn van Exel
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Linking Wikimedia and OpenStreetMap/OpenHistoricalMap
Richard Welty
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Collaborative Corridors to Address OSM Underrepresentation
Bill Wetherholt
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Mapping the Virtual Border Wall with Public Records, Satellite Imagery, and Virtual Reality
Dave Maass
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15:05 – 15:15 | Break |
15:15 – 17:20 | Come Here or Go Away?: Identifying Challenges to Scholarly Wikipedia Editing
Savannah Cragin, Dr. Jennifer Johnson
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Parks, Spawns, Nests and Pikachu: OpenStreetMap and Pokemon GO players
Christopher Greene-Szmadzinski
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Print an OSM Extract: Trailheads maps from OpenStreetMap
Rob Chohan
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Find your 'emergency eyes' - what to map near you
Nicole Martinelli
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17:20 – 17:30 | Break |
17:30 – 18:00 | Wikimedia New York City, Sure We Can
Wil540 art
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Magic Wand: A Plugin for JOSM
Junior Flores
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Swiping into a love of OSM
Dan Joseph
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WikiCred 2022 Grant Cycle Overview
Ariel Cetrone (WMDC)
Applicants should expand on the ideas, themes, and work of past WikiCred projects. In short, applicants should think about how their tools, initiatives or events can generate momentum for themes and ideas behind 2020’s slate of successfully funded WikiCred projects.
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Future of North American Wikimedia affiliates
Peter B Meyer
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18:00 – 18:20 | Closing Remarks
Announcements from OpenStreetMap US & WikConference North America |
18:20 – 19:00 | Open socializing
Use this time to socialize virtually, ask questions of speakers. The event platform will be moderated until 19:00 ET. |
Saturday, November 12, 11:30–17:00
Please note: this program is still in development as speakers are confirmed and is subject to change.
Time (Eastern Time, UTC−5) |
Track 1 | Track 2 | Track 3 | Track 4 |
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11:30 – 12:00 | Better tagging, better bike lanes, better cities
We’ll be discussing a proposed schema for detailed tagging of bicycle lane protection. We’ll talk about how to improve the proposal and how to use it in practice. By promoting better data on bicycle ways, we won’t just help cyclists pick the safest route - we’ll help city planners across the country and the world create better cities.
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Atlas of Surveillance: Building a crowdsource map of police technology
In this session, EFF researchers will explain some of the common surveillance technologies, then work with attendees to submit more data through our "Report Back" tool, which assigns micro research assignments to volunteers and students.
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TBC | Wikimedia Indiana: A New User Group Rooted in Cultural Heritage
Wikimedians in Indiana would like to use the occasion of WCNA to announce the formation of a new prospective user group, Wikimedia Indiana—currently being reviewed by the Affiliations Committee for affiliate status. This new group, led by several longtime Wikipedians active in the GLAM space, has been kickstarted by work centered on IUPUI University Library in Indianapolis and its many community partners. We are a small group, but we have already held several events and training in the past few months and would like to share our successes and invite others to collaborate. In 2022, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis received a grant from the Central Indiana Community Foundation (CICF) Library Fund to increase public participation in Indiana’s history and cultural heritage by implementing two inter-related projects: 1.) contributing images to Wikimedia Commons from Indiana cultural heritage sites that take part in the Indiana Memory Project and 2.) fostering a community of Wikipedia contributors in Indiana with a campaign of public programs, training, and other outreach. Launched in June, the project has already resulted in over 10,000 uploads to Wikimedia Commons from 3 Indiana cultural institutions, 2 editathons (with 2 more scheduled on Nov. 1), 6 successful DYKs, and staff training at multiple local cultural institutions. With this core, funded project in motion, Wikimedians are invigorating a new community in Indiana with the hope that it can sustain activity and grow beyond the university library. During this presentation, we will discuss the Wikimedia community in Indiana, the state of the IUPUI project, the grant process, and advice from the team on starting new initiatives in areas of the country without much activity. The proposed session will also look to the project's future and discuss how the rest of the Wikimedia community, anywhere in North America, can help the effort.
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12:00 – 13:00 | View it! tool: utilizing Structured Data on Commons for image discovery
View it! is a user script and Toolforge-hosted media search tool to show Wikimedia users (editors and readers) Wikimedia Commons depicting– or otherwise related to– the article they are viewing. View it! helps editors easily find and add relevant items to a given Wikimedia page and can be used across all Wikimedia projects and language versions. The tool allows users access to the full catalog of relevant, tagged images on Wikimedia Commons vs the finite, highly curated images you may find on a Wikipedia article or Wikidata item.
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13:00 – 13:45 | Tagging Party
Come with examples of things you aren’t sure about how to tag in OpenStreetMap. Try to stump us with the gnarliest edge cases and most blatant gaps in our tagging system that you can think of. The rest of us will try our best to suggest a tag – or five. Afterwards, we’ll put together a list of what we’re stumped on and post it to a wider forum for ideas.
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TBC | OSM Education Birds of a feather
Listen to presentations from two educators, Jamie Dickinson & Celeste Reynolds on using OpenStreetMap in the Classroom, followed by a discussion for those sharing an interest in open mapping in education. The discussion is open but should focus on what the project needs to do to identify and remove obstacles to adoption by a broader community of educators in a broader variety of institutions. This could include new tools, tactics, and techniques to assist uptake by students of all stripes.
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TBC |
13:45 – 14:30 | TBC | |||
14:30 – 15:15 | Catskill Park, NY forest landcover mapathon
Catskill Park is a popular tourist destination for people in New York state, and some OSMers have been there, it would be nice to make the map look better than what's on a trail map! There's already an OSM Tasking Manager of it, which I will share during the session.
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Digital platforms as repositories of shared knowledge about conflict
During this session, we aim to discuss the impact of technology on collective memory and to explore how open source platforms are increasingly becoming the dominant way to remember past atrocities. Similarly, this session is intended to broaden our understanding of how platforms such as Wikipedia can ensure that what happened in the past is not forgotten and become a primary vehicle for collective memory.
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How Wiki Education supports 12,000 new editors a year
In this panel, three Wiki Education staff (Senior Program Manager, Wikipedia Student Program Helaine Blumenthal, Senior Wikipedia Expert Ian Ramjohn, and Chief Programs Officer LiAnna Davis) will explain how we successfully bring 12,000 new editors to the English Wikipedia each year through our Wikipedia Student Program. We'll cover: * How do we find new instructors to join the program, particularly those who teach in diverse subject areas or at diverse institutions, to promote our movement strategy of knowledge equity? * How do we communicate with the thousands of instructors who have now taught with Wikipedia, and who we want to encourage to participate in the program again? What technical tools do we use? * What tools do we use to get instructors who've never edited Wikipedia up to speed on how to teach with Wikipedia? * How do we provide Wikipedia training for that many students using technical tools? * How can we possibly track what that many new editors are doing at once?! * Why do we use paid staff and not volunteers for our work? * How do we evaluate the quality of the work students add to Wikipedia? * What are some examples of the types of content student editors add to Wikipedia through our Wikipedia Student Program? * How do we encourage courses that added great content to participate again? * And some open time for audience questions! We'll focus on how we've scaled up our impact, from supporting 200 students initially to routinely supporting 12,000 student editors and growing. People who attend this session can expect to learn how Wiki Education harnesses the power of technical tools like the Dashboard, Salesforce, and Pardot to scale the impact of our program. Participants are encouraged to ask questions and learn more about how Wiki Education works!
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Wiki99 and the global canon
"Wiki99 as the canon for global discourse presents *Wiki99, a project to encourage Wikipedia translation *Module:Wiki99, the tool which supports the project *the concept of the global canon, which Wiki99 produces
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15:15 – 16:00 | Wikifunctions - a new Wikimedia project
Wikifunctions is a new Wikimedia project we are working on with the goal of allowing a community to create and maintain a library of functions. The main goal of Wikifunctions is to support the creation of Abstract Wikipedia, a Wikipedia where the content is created and maintained only once, but can be read in any of the more than 300 languages Wikipedia supports, and can be edited in any of those languages. But Wikifunctions explicitly aims for a wider goal: to provide a library of functions for many different use cases. Functions answer questions. And as such, functions are an integral part of knowledge for a modern world. Besides the functions necessary to support the goals of Abstract Wikipedia, i.e. functions which allow for natural language generation, we envision also to support functions for other domains. Maps and geographical data provide a rich environment for the application of functions. We will be able to use functions in order to ensure constraints on the geographical data in Wikidata or in projects such as OpenStreetMaps, or to use the data in novel ways and thus also to encourage the creation of more data. Wikidata has still large gaps regarding for example historical maps of former countries, distribution maps of species, or for describing the geographical extension of climates or ecosystems. In this talk we will present Wikifunctions, the current state of the project, and the plans regarding Abstract Wikipedia. We will also present some possibilities regarding how geodata can be used and leveraged with Wikifunctions, in order to start a conversation with the community, collect ideas and to see how interesting certain use cases might be. More information about Wikifunctions and Abstract Wikipedia can be found here: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Abstract_Wikipedia Previous presentations and articles about the project can be found here: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Abstract_Wikipedia/Papers,_press,_and_videos
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WW, WWWWW (Wikiproject Witches, Who, What, When, Where, Why) & A Woman of the Century
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16:00 – 17:00 | Wikidata's tenth birthday
Wikidata turns 10 at the end of October, 2022. There is a map of global activities. We can have a little online celebration, with quick talks and demos and commentary. It's not organized yet, but several speakers/demonstrators have materials to show: Minh Nguyen on how OpenStreetMap uses Wikidata information (and perhaps future prospects). Possible sources: [1], [2], [3], [4], [5] (p22 of SotM 2022 by Dsoua, Schott, and Lautenbach)Andrew Lih, on many projectsHighlight of training materials from the regular Philadelphia WikiSalonPharos and econterms on a demo project on Wikispore showing data on nonprofit organizations drawn from Wikidata.Room for more. We can actually sponsor a cake or something, but we have the problem that we are not all together.
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Saturday, October 9
- Icon Key
- Presentation Discussion Panel Workshop Edit-a-thon
English Spanish French Human-translated Machine-translated
Gender gap (Hoosier Women at Work tie-in) No photos or recording for this session
Sunday, October 10
- Icon Key
- Presentation Discussion Panel Workshop Edit-a-thon
English Spanish French Human-translated Machine-translated
Gender gap (Hoosier Women at Work tie-in) No photos or recording for this session