Waray Wikipedia

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Waray Wikipedia
Wikipedia-logo-v2-war.svg
Type of site
Internet encyclopedia project
Available inWaray
HeadquartersMiami, Florida
OwnerWikimedia Foundation
URLwar.wikipedia.org
CommercialNo
RegistrationOptional
Launched25 September 2005; 16 years ago (2005-09-25)

The Waray Wikipedia is the Waray language edition of Wikipedia. It is hosted on servers run by the Wikimedia Foundation since 25 September 2005.[1] As of December 31, 2021, this edition has 1,265,623 articles[2] and is the 11th largest Wikipedia edition.[3] Despite having very few active users (85), the Waray Wikipedia has a high number of automatically generated articles created by bots, most of them by Swedish Wikipedian Sverker Johansson's Lsjbot.[4][5][6]

Waray (or Waray-Waray) is spoken by approximately 3.6 million[7] people in the Eastern Visayas region of the Philippines.

History[]

The Waray Wikipedia was first organized in Tacloban on 25 September 2005 by Harvey Fiji. The wiki had a small number of contributors, with fewer than ten editors per month until April 2009. The first meet-up of editors took place in January 2013 in Tacloban.[8][9]

By early 2011 the Waray Wikipedia had attracted notice for including more than twice as many articles as the Tagalog Wikipedia, which is based on the principal language of the Philippines. This discrepancy was explained by the very large number of articles added automatically by bots, with no direct human input.[10][11] By early June 2014 the Waray Wikipedia had attained a very high article count of 1 million, but a very low article depth of less than 3. Article depth is an attempt to measure the collaborative quality of articles, based on the number of edits per article.

According to automatically updated Wikimedia data, as of December 31, 2021, the Waray Wikipedia has 2,881,338 pages (including user pages, help pages, etc.), 85 active users, and 6,279,209 total edits. The article depth of Waray Wikipedia is 3.55—a rough indicator of the article's collaborative quality—compared to 158.12 for the Tagalog Wikipedia. (Waray and Tagalog are related languages belonging to the Malayo-Polynesian branch of the Austronesian language family.)

However, Waray Wikipedia does not appear to be widely used in the Philippines; as of March 2021 90% of Wikipedia views from that country were directed at English Wikipedia, with 5% going to Tagalog and 3%, to Russian Wikipedia.[12] About 35% of Waray Wikipedia views come from China, 25% from the United States, about 15% from Germany and France, and less than 8% from the Philippines.[13]

Milestones[]

  • On 26 August 2010, the Waray Wikipedia passed the 100,000-article milestone, making it the 35th largest language edition at that time.[9]
  • On 8 June 2014, the encyclopedia passed the 1 million article mark, thanks to Lsjbot.[8] It was the very first Wikipedia for a language in the Philippines and Asia that reached 1 million articles.[14]

References[]

  1. ^ "Start of the Waray Wikipedia". War.wikipedia.org. 25 September 2005.
  2. ^ "Mga Estadistika". War.wikipedia.org. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
  3. ^ List of Wikipedias
  4. ^ For This Author, 10,000 Wikipedia Articles is a Good Day's Work - WSJ
  5. ^ The world's most prolific writer - Features – N by Norwegian
  6. ^ Hans robot har skrivit halva Wikipedia - Internetworld
  7. ^ "Waray". Ethnologue. Summer Institute of Linguistics. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  8. ^ a b Locsin, Joel (10 June 2014). "Waray Wikipedia hits 1 million articles". Yahoo News Philippines.
  9. ^ a b "Wikipedia Statistics Waray". Stats.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
  10. ^ Martin W. Lewis (18 April 2011). "The Linguistic Geography of the Wikipedia". GeoCurrents.info.
  11. ^ Siddique, Ashik (27 December 2013). "Meet the Stats Master Making Sense of Wikipedia's Massive Data Trove". Wired.
  12. ^ "Wikimedia Traffic Analysis Report - Wikipedia Page Views Per Country - Breakdown". stats.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  13. ^ "Wikimedia Traffic Analysis Report - Page Views Per Wikipedia Language - Breakdown". stats.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  14. ^ Nazareno, Eileen (5 August 2015). "A Virtual Pool of Free Knowledge on Eastern Visayas". The Freeman. Archived from the original on 5 August 2015 – via The Philippine Star.

Further reading[]

External links[]

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