MeatballWiki
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MeatballWiki is a wiki dedicated to online communities, network culture, and hypermedia.<ref name="ebersbach">Template:Cite book</ref> Containing a record of experience on running wikis, it is intended for "discussion about wiki philosophy, wiki culture, instructions and observations."<ref name=Nikolic/>
According to founder Sunir Shah, it ran on "a hacked-up version of UseModWiki".<ref name="c2">Template:Cite web</ref> In April 2013, after several spam attacks and a period of downtime, the site was made read-only.<ref>RecentChanges; first archived "This page is read-only" page.</ref> In March 2021, the site was de-spammed and reopened for editing as part of a rebuilding effort alongside Ward's Wiki and Community Wiki.<ref>Posts on meatball:MeatballToDo and meatball:SunirShah.</ref>
Founding
[edit]MeatballWiki was started in 2000 by Sunir Shah, a forum administrator from Ontario, Canada, on Clifford Adams's Internet domain usemod.com.<ref name="WikiIndex">Template:Cite web</ref> MeatballWiki was created as a place for discussion about Ward Cunningham's WikiWikiWeb and its operation, which were beyond the scope of WikiWikiWeb. As Sunir Shah stated in the WikiWikiWeb page referring to MeatballWiki: "Community discussions about how to run the community itself should be left here. Abstract discussions, or objective analyses of community are encouraged on MeatballWiki."<ref name="c2" /> Shah created this site "as a friendly fork of WikiWikiWeb." About the Meatball project, the website says: "The web, and media like it, looks like a big bowl of meatball spaghetti. You've got content – the meatballs – linked together with the spaghetti."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
According to Igor Nikolic and Chris Davis, MeatballWiki was spun off of the Portland Pattern Repository, the first wiki.<ref name=Nikolic>Template:Cite book</ref>
Relationship to wiki community
[edit]The original intent of MeatballWiki was to offer observations and opinions about wikis and their online communities, with the intent of helping online communities, culture and hypermedia.Template:Cn
In Good Faith Collaboration, Joseph M. Reagle Jr. describes MeatballWiki as "the wiki about wiki collaboration".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Being a community about communities, MeatballWiki became the launching point for other wiki-based projects and a general resource for broader wiki concepts, reaching "cult status".<ref name="ebersbach" /> It describes the general tendencies observed on wikis and other online communities, for example the life cycles of wikis and people's behavior on them.<ref name="WikiIndex" />
What differentiates MeatballWiki from many online meta-communities is that participants spend much of their time talking about sociology rather than technology, and when they do talk about technology, they do so in a social context.<ref>Template:Cite conference</ref>
The MeatballWiki members created a "bus tour" through existing wikis.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Barnstars – badges that wiki editors use to express appreciation for another editor's work – were invented on MeatballWiki and adopted by Wikipedia in 2003.<ref>Template:Cite conference Template:Closed access Author's copy</ref>
Evgeny Morozov of Boston Review notes that another Wikipedia norm around voting may also have stemmed from MeatballWiki.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
See also
[edit]References
[edit]External links
[edit]- Official website
- Official website as of March 31, 2014 web.archive.org