Wikia in the news

This pages details mentions of Wikicities in the media. This does not include mentions in blogs. See also press releases and presentations about Wikicities. Links have been added and may not have been present in the original news articles.


 * Please note that the text on this page is predominately fair use and is not for distribution under the GFDL.

Siliconeer
Siliconeer, a magazine targetting the South Asian community living on the U.S. West Coast, published an article about the October Earthquake by Wikicitizen Sabahat Ashraf: After the Quake: The Web and Expatriate Support.


 * "For about six months, I have been working on a project called WikiPakistan (pakistan.wikicities.com), a “Pakistan Information Database” hosted on Wikicities... As I read the news about the quake, I realized that this was exactly the kind of situation that this project could address. I created a page on the site devoted to the quake. Then I sent an e-mail to several mailing lists I am on and to friends informing them and inviting them to contribute... Over the next few days, I fell into the routine of following what I could from mailing lists, e-mails being sent around, news sites, and the like and adding information to the wiki site. Very soon, others joined in—not least, people on the ground in Pakistan." See siliconeer.com for the full article.

Other media coverage related to the Pakistan wiki is listed at.

C-SPAN
Jimmy Wales was interviewed by Brian Lamb on C-SPAN, a United States cable television network on September 26, 2005. Watch the show or read the transcript. The mention of Wikicities occurs about 20 minutes into the program.


 * "And she and I founded a company, Wikicities which we're using the same technology but it's not about the technology really it's about the social structure and the social model of bringing people together and how to – how to build a community of thoughtful people who can do something good. You know there's lots of communities on the Internet that are not healthy, they're sort of argumentative, difficult environments. But we try to build a healthy, friendly environment and say, well, let's all work together to do something useful."


 * "And but the idea is there's lots of types of things people want to do that are perfectly valid that don't fit under the rubric of the non-profit educational mission. So, for example, we have – some of the early successful sites would be the, you know, we have a Star Wars site where people are documenting the entire history of the series and doing community pages to discuss, you know, the philosophy or the theories of what's going on in Star Wars."

Florida Trend
http://www.floridatrend.com/media/images/2005-09/current_coverSEPTEMBER05.jpg Along with a lot of brief mentions of Wikicities with the Wikimania-related press in August, the Florida Trend described Wikia and Wikimedia under a heading "The Wiki World" in part of an article on Wikimania, and went on to discuss Wikicities and Memory Alpha. The article was also the first public mention of possible funding for Wikicities. The story was by Cynthia Barnett and was the cover story of the September issue (registration required).


 * "The site, called Wikicities, lets users create "wikis" — sites edited collaboratively — around specific topics of interest. On Wikipedia, users can't just go and make a page about their hobby, their company or themselves. On Wikicities, they can — for free. And in contrast to Wikipedia, where content is supposed to reflect a rigorously neutral point of view, the Wikicities sites are free to reflect the perspectives of their organizers and participants."


 * "The biggest project on Wikicities so far is called Memory Alpha, "a collaborative project to create the most definitive, accurate and accessible encyclopedia and reference for everything related to 'Star Trek.' " Dedicated Trekkies who used to blog or chat on hundreds of different websites now are building one together. [...] Why won't Trekkies or others just band together outside the Wiki umbrella? For one, the sophisticated, high-quality Wiki software provides them with the bandwidth and editing platform they need to have the kind of collaborative effort they want."


 * "In addition, Wikipedia has become a powerful, attractive brand, says Joichi Ito, an internet leader in Japan and the CEO of the venture capital firm Neoteny. Ito, who has helped Wales raise an initial $1 million for Wikicities, believes Wales has created enough consumer loyalty to make a for-profit Wiki model work. "Jimmy and Wikipedia are THE Wiki brand.""

GovTech
GovTech, a US Government Technology news site, reported on the BeyondVoting Wikicity on August 17, 2005 in an article called "NYC Community Board Member Discusses Wiki, Online Technology, For Local Governance". Tom Lowenhaupt was interviewed and said:
 * "At one level I initiated the wiki to discern ways to improve the website. But more fundamentally, I was looking for ways to improve the efficacy of community and the community board. People will only invest time in a governance website if there's impact, and as currently structured, the community boards have little impact."


 * "In a general sense, the BeyondVoting Wiki's role is to explore ways to better engage the public in the governance process. BeyondVoting uses the wiki's uncomplicated editing tools to create an open and transparent environment for participation in the governance process. Most optimistically, the wiki will magically transform a black hole into a magnet. We want people to see their ideas out there, making a difference."

Federal Computer Week
The BeyondVoting Wikicity was featured in an article called "Wikis find role in community governance" by Aliya Sternstein. The article was on fcw.com, the online version of Federal Computer Week, a magazine for government, business and technology news.


 * "''Some small governmental bodies have already created wikis. For example, a Queens, N.Y., community board member created BeyondVoting, a community governance wiki. Tom Lowenhaupt, the wiki's founder and a governance systems developer, said he hopes the wiki will help raise board members' awareness of community concerns. Lowenhaupt said he wants to apply the same technology to the city's charter revision process after he completes an evaluation of the BeyondVoting wiki."


 * "E-democracy experts, however, say the BeyondVoting wiki will need a focused purpose to be effective. Steven Clift, editor of the Democracies Online e-mail discussion list, said wikis 'really need to feed and foster a sense of direction.'" (see the article for more)

District Administration Magazine
Wikicities, and in particular, the High School Online Collaborative Writing Wikicity, was featured in an article in the June 2005 edition of District Administration. This magazine for education leaders apparently reaches "more than 72,000 top-level decision makers in virtually every school district in the United States". The article was "Affinity Groups and Wikicities: Interest groups are one of the Web's hottest trends" by Odvard Egil Dyrli, and can be seen online at districtadministration.com.


 * "Recently a new type of affinity group arrived on the Internet, following in the footsteps of Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia that anyone can edit. Known collectively as Wikicities, users create Wikicity pages on whatever interests them, and visitors can add to and edit the information they contain using tools included at each site. Wikicities offer powerful collaboration opportunities.


 * For example, Paul Allison, a teacher in the East Side Community High School in New York, founded the High School Online Collaborative Writing site as one of the first Wikicities for schools, to "build on what we already know about collaboration and language and take advantage of the unique features of this new media environment." So far, 10 other high schools in New York have joined the group. "Collecting student work online is a challenge, but well worth the effort," he says, "and I am enjoying the work of deepening computer literacy.""

Time Magazine
Wikicities got a brief mention at the end of an article on wikis in the June 6 edition of Time magazine. The article was called "It's a Wiki, Wiki World" and focused mainly on Wikipedia.

Here's an extract, from the third page of the online version which was posted on May 29. [links added]


 * ''Whatever happens to Wikipedia, the wiki genie is out of the bottle... Wales has a for-profit website, Wikicities, where anyone can form a community. (The two largest are geeking out on the chronologies of Star Wars and Star Trek.) "It's a form of brainstorming that's bigger than one person standing at a flip chart," says Cunningham. "And there's a timelessness to it. You can do a wiki over one year or 10."

St Petersburg Times
An article titled Global villages convene in wiki town halls in the St Petersburg Times on April 4th included an interview with St. Pete native Jimmy Wales:


 * Wikicities relies on the same formula of user collaboration that has made its predecessor, Wikipedia, so successful.

Wall Street Journal
An article on Wikicities appeared in the Wall Street Journal at the end of March. Many of the different wikis were mentioned, and some Wikicitizens were interviewed for the piece. The article also appeared in Spanish.


 * Through Wikicities, groups of Web users can create their own free Web sites and fill them with, well, nearly anything. Among the topics being discussed on the nascent site: Macintosh computers, college hockey and real-world cities like Los Angeles, Beijing and Calgary...read more

Wired
Wikicities got a lengthy write up in the March 2005 edition of Wired magazine. The article, by Daniel Pink, was called "The Book Stops Here" and focused primarily on Wikipedia and Jimmy Wales' past, but Wikicities got a 270 word mention. The following extract is from page 136 of the magazine, and is also available on Wired.com.


 * Late last year, Wales and Angela Beesley, an astonishly dedicated Wikipedian, launched a for-profit venture called WikiCities. The company will provide free hosting for "community-based" sites - RVers, poodle owners, genealogy buffs, and so on. The sites will operate on the same software that powers Wikipedia, and the content will be available under a free license. But WikiCities intends to make money by selling advertising. After all, if several thousand people can create an encyclopedia, a few hundred Usher devotees should be able to put together the ultimate fan site. And if legions of Usher fans are hanging out in one place, some advertiser will pay to try to sell them concert tickets or music downloads.


 * It may feel like we've been down this road before - remember GeoCites and theglobe.com? But Wales says this is different because those earlier sites lacked any mechanism for true community. "It was just free homepages," he says. WikiCities, he believes, will let people who share a passion also share a project. They'll be able to design and build projects together.

Press release
Wikicities' first press release is published by PRWeb:
 * Wikia announced today the creation of the one hundredth wiki at Wikicities.

MacWorld reports on the WikiMac Wikicity, and quote David Feng saying "We're ready for prime time":
 * The Wiki Information Project for Mac users is described as a, "new Mac knowledge community...'

Forbes
Wikicities is mentioned in the press for the first time. An article about Extreme Blogging at forbes.com says:
 * So Wales has recently started two for-profit wiki companies. The first, Wikicities, lets users develop collaborative communities around cities, schools or other interests, such as sports teams, celebrities, etc. This is similar to Yahoo Groups (formerly Geocities), MSN Groups and the new Google Groups. Like Yahoo's Groups, Wikicities' revenue model is purely ad-based.