Admin Forum:What is an efficient way for Admins to "patrol" a wiki?

I am an admin on a wiki and am looking for a more effective way to "patrol" edits. What I am currently doing is keeping a tab on the Recent Changes/Recent Activity Special Pages and check out the history of each edit to make sure it is a legitimate edit. But I don't think this is scalable. If there are more admins, how does each admin know if the edit has not already been checked? I have been googling and there seems to be many different tools to get the job done, but I am not sure which is best. What does Wikipedia do? What does Wikia do? cheers


 * Effectively it depends on your wiki's size. If you haven't got that many pages, you can simply check all the pages in RecentChanges, while you can pretty much ignore edits from qualified users like admins. Another handy tip is to add sometimg to Special:MyPage/global.css here at Central.
 * importScriptPage('AjaxRC/code.js', 'dev');
 * This will place a box on your RC feed which when checked will autorefresh the RecentChanges, which will make it easier to patrol the edits. ~>ฬ ђ tคlк 08:51, September 16, 2011 (UTC)


 * The red ! should be removed when you click mark as patrolled. That's how admins know what to patrol (you can ignore the edits without the !). - Tjcool007 (Talk) 10:01, September 16, 2011 (UTC)
 * Thanks - I did not know about the 'patrol' functionaliy'. This help page was useful. I am able to mark a new page as patrolled, but I am still not seeing any "!" in the recent changes. Is there another help page that will give me a better overview? -- boy.pockets talk 11:40, September 16, 2011 (UTC)


 * To correct a few things, the patrol system is not active on any wiki I know of other than here. It is not very helpful. The above code that Woganhemlock gave you is the best idea. However that goes in your global js, not global css.--