Knowledge

User talk:GreenC/2016

Source đź“ť

2641:
it contains the text cited and there is nothing wrong with the page (soft-404 etc). We're using bots to deal with link-rot for already-down links because there are too many to fix manually. This process is not error-free though, thus CB's talk page messages to manually check the links. If an editor is taking the time to add a cite template flag like you suggested, they really should be adding the archive link directly it doesn't take much longer. Otherwise why not have an automated process that adds archive links for every cite template added. That may eventually happen but not sure there is consensus for that level of bot intervention due to the problems of accuracy. It's one thing to fix existing dead links, another to fully automate the process for still live links. DASHBot did that for a while and honestly it had problems that WaybackMedic is currently fixing (not that WM is perfect either). If you decide to explore further I would suggest trial balloon in Village Pump and notify the talk page of cite web template as certain users like Trappist the Monk and Cyberbot would be key. --
5406:
almost all sites), the new site owner is unrelated to the former site owner, hosts completely different stuff and sets up a very restrictive robots.txt file. This would not only keep IA from archiving the new contents (no problem), but also have the side-effect of removing the previous contents of the former owner. Knowledge follows suit, removes the links and over time most of our previously well sourced articles lack their sources for verification. Some trolls come around and challenge the previously perfectly sourced stuff (just because they can) and if no other source can be found (in some cases, there is only a single reliable source even for important stuff), the contents will have to be removed, articles detoriate and eventually may have to be deleted as well. Of course, this wouldn't affect mainstream knowledge where we'll always find another source, but it would affect a lot of more detailed or more sophisticated articles and reduce the knowledge presented in Knowledge downto what can be sourced in printed sources...
5486:
registry, or the full name and address). This ID could be used to detect site owner changes, and in this scheme the robots.txt file would never be applied across site owner changes. This would give site owners the flexibility to reconsider if they want their contents archived or not, but also protect contents of former site owners from being suppressed. Unfortunately, unless there would be some easy means for bots to check the validity of such IDs with domain registries at crawl time, this scheme could be abused by deliberately providing IDs of former site owners. Also, publically readable IDs could be used by some to sabotage the contracts with the registries. However, with some more thought and research along this line the basic idea could perhaps be refined by some public-/private-key or challenge-response mechanism making it difficult/impossible to fake IDs.
5282:- There's a solution for that. At the top-center of the diff screen is a pyramid shape button. With that the changes become clear. I agree the edit summary should do as you say the problem has been I have used AWB-external-script as the edit framework and it doesn't support custom edit summaries, I have no control over that but if you click on the "WaybackMedic 2" it tells you what the bot does. In the future I hope to use a different framework. If archive.org changes its policy or the links become available again, IABot will re-add them, the information is readily available and easily reinserted in the future. The bot tries to maintain existing style of spacing it is quite difficult and sometimes doesn't get it exactly right. -- 2675:
chunk of time doing a relatively mundane task, so I don't. I'd rather handle only the errors/cases that do not archive properly with IA (usually the same sites are repeat offenders, so WebCitation would be better in those cases) but the idea is that I'd like to call such a script on specific pages in specific requests. The other policy stuff could be interesting/useful down the line and it might be useful to prepare for that, but I think of my own writing and the hours a month such a script would save me. (That is, if I still was bothering to archive my links, which I should.) By the way, you recommended that I check whether Wayback was automatically archiving new links added to articles. I added several bare URL refs to
5257:
control, of course. However, archive.org might change their policy in the future, or the site owner might change the robots.txt file again, so that such archive-url links become useful again - but if GreenC bot removes such links they are lost forever causing an article to suffer from link rot eventually. What I propose instead is to either just comment out those links as HTML comments or to introduce a new dead-url argument muting the "archived on ..." stuff from display, but leaving it technically intact in the article's source. This would ensure that someone trying to improve a citation later on (perhaps decades in the future) will stumble upon that archive-url link in order to recheck it.
6593: 365: 2880:
or (5) write a custom script that uses the IA API to save a site and add it in my wikitext (likely most time consuming but all I'm missing in my script is the IA part right now). You're familiar with my use case, so what would you suggest? I'd prefer to have the tool available to everyone, but I'm really looking for the quickest way of getting IA links for live sites into my citations. (My citations are formatted through Zotero export and the Citoid API, usually.) Also the medic.nim compile is missing "docopt"—if you think I should continue with that route, should that be part of another package or is it a separate dependency? Appreciate your help,
5428:
caused problems no only for Knowledge but former site owners who wanted their old content available on Wayback. Internet Archive is aware of this, there are a number of long threads in the forums there, it has impacted a number of sites. Nevertheless keeping in perspective the numbers in total are not large. There are currently about 1.1 million Wayback links in Knowledge as of August 20. Of those approximately 30,000 have been removed as non-functioning. Of those approximately 10,000 are due to robots.txt (I'm still working on how many exactly). So roughly 10,000 out of 1 million is 1%. That's over the entire lifetime of Knowledge 14+ years. --
6555: 321: 4148: 1014:. This is intentional as other authors require this to avoid false negatives. Most of the time it works OK but some cases like this produce false positives. It's all a trade off between avoiding false negatives while producing as few false positives as possible. I check each one before adding and felt in this case it wasn't excessive though it did appear to be about 50% I usually aim for 40% or less before adding a custom search (which has its own trade offs thus not done often) but if most cases it's much less and often 0%. -- 6548: 6541: 314: 307: 5107:"templatname-soccerway") so it doesn't conflict with ref names in articles. If editors see duplicate refs with different names (or a special bot is designed for this purpose to seek them out), they can merge like you did in this case. Otherwise there's really no practical way for a bot (or anyone) to know, it would have to scrape every ref from every template used in an article and compare, it would be super complicated and resource intensive. Every bot and tool that works on citations would require that code. -- 5912: 3406: 2152:, where I saw it, but the chance it will be picked up by someone and resolved is minute. Also because in the edit summary only appears "WaybackMedic" and no reference to "This page has dead links, please have a look at them" or something along those lines. In general I hate those tags at the top and they are useless in many cases as they stay on the pages for many years, but in this case I think it's useful, especially when linked to the Wikiprojects on the talk page. What do you think? Cheers, 5905: 72: 937: 5829: 5641: 6621: 2267: 412: 2431: 3758: 614: 6563: 6192: 329: 1731:
would be big gain because it doesn't impact anything other than a notification, and WM is operating on archive.org links besides those added by Cyberbot, and my guess is only impacting about 5-10% of those. I'm also uncomfortable doing by bot what was meant to be a manual check since there can be soft-404s that bots believe are valid but only a human can verify; it would still work for the deletions, but the problems mentioned above. --
2355:/save/ creates an archive of the page. It's a command that triggers the Wayback Machine to begin archiving the page. It only needs to be done once. Once the archive is created, linking to an archive page for citation purposes should be a 14-digit date. Since I don't know what the correct date is, replacing with "*" leads to the archive index page and hoping someone will fill in the correct archival date from the index. -- 607: 5451:
only get taken down through a legal request from the site owner, and that only new snapshots should follow the currently active robots.txt while older ones remain untouched. As an alternative, we could try to come up with a way where site owners can apply another object like robots.txt, that is specific to the wayback crawler, but the thing to lookout for is making sure the site wasn't usurped by someone else.—
1470: 6401:
then we can't use it. But the mere fact the link is dead, well most links go dead (average lifespan is 7 years), that is normal and doesn't mean they removed it due to inaccuracy or defamation. If you have evidence, but the evidence is private knowledge (such as a legal letter from your lawyer to the newspaper and a confirming reply) then you might need to contact the Wikimedia Foundation. However
2516::) I think what your asking is a way for links to be added to the Wayback Machine in an automated fashion. If so, that is already done for all external link added to Knowledge. As I understand it. It should be easy to test to make sure its working. Find an external link that is not yet in the Wayback or Knowledge, add it to an article, check a few days later and see if it's now in the Wayback. -- 6459: 509: 5084:{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerway.com/national/ireland-republic/premier-league/2011/regular-season/|title=2011 League of Ireland|date=|work=www.soccerway.com|accessdate=14 February 2011| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20101231074534/http://www.soccerway.com/national/ireland-republic/premier-league/2011/regular-season/| archivedate= 31 December 2010 <!--DASHBot--: --> 5076:{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerway.com/national/ireland-republic/premier-league/2011/regular-season/|title=2011 League of Ireland|date=|work=www.soccerway.com|accessdate=14 February 2011| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20101231074534/http://www.soccerway.com/national/ireland-republic/premier-league/2011/regular-season/| archivedate= 31 December 2010 <!--DASHBot--: --> 2172:
in a category which other bots/people can use to find them. The edit summary I agree is not good; the bot uses AWB which currently has no feature to dynamically modify the edit summary - I've asked for this feature twice. I should be using the direct API instead, but AWB is how the bot was designed when it started out. It's on my list of things to change in future versions. --
2894:
the dummy archive link entirely (if no working snapshot exists). It's not far off from the bot flagging idea of (1) except the flag is an archive.org URL. Docopt can be installed using nimble, the package manager, if not already installed the Nim Install instructions above has the steps for nimble. I think we are close to testing it out. After it compiles download the
6385:
policy, under unsourced (and inaccurate) information, the section edited should not be reincluded. After my previous edit, you added the content back. I presume this was an oversight as in the edit summary, "removing unsourced information" was added. I'm open to your feedback on this but feel strongly the section and the sources should not be included on the page.
127:. This user right gives you access to some of Knowledge's most important templates and modules; it is critical that you edit them wisely and that you only make edits that are backed up by consensus. It is also very important that no one else be allowed to access your account, so you should consider taking a few moments to 987:
works are showing up, other than having a table of contents that includes "St. Ives". So maybe you need to evaluate your search strings or something similar. I suspect that searching with initials instead of the name actually used by the author (in this case, Brayton Ives or General Brayton Ives) is causing this. -
3358:
need to create sub-sections. I don't really care and am fine how it is given limited content. It just didn't seem right to put so much weight on comments critical in the first paragraph while other substantial parts of his life such as long academic career get a passing mention of one or two sentences ie.
2237:. There was no way around it, so I choose the path of least damage. I've been going though manually but if you see anything, please help restore the dead link and cbignore templates for any url's that seem to deserve it. If there was a cbignore before it should be restored (including the |bot=medic). -- 4667:{{cite web |url=http://www.abheritage.ca/abpolitics/administration/maps_choice.php?Year=1935&Constit=Vegreville |archivedate=December 8, 2010 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101208180142/http://www.abheritage.ca/abpolitics/administration/maps_choice.php?Year=1935&Constit=Vegreville }} 6059:
I was speaking with Niharika, and we agreed that it would be a bad idea to have the queued mass edit runs be done on the requesting user's account. Consequently, single page requests can still be done from the user account. This in mind the Oauth permissions have been radically reduced, and the ToS
6014:
That looks amazing. Can't wait to see it in action. By the ToS you mean when logging into OAuth it asks for permission to do high-volume editing? That was the only thing that gave me pause as most editors normally need to get AWB or BRFA permissions. It could allow SPA's for example to cause trouble.
5409:
While we are talking about "site owners", legally, domains cannot be owned, only rented. If you stop paying the fees, the domain will fall back to the registry and can be rented to someone else instead. Therefore, the whole idea of robots.txt files must be based on the assumption that it only applies
5338:
Chiming in here as the author of IABot. IABot has uses a plethora of means to fetch an appropriate snapshot for a dead URL, and then maintains that information is a large DB, approx. 15GB in size. Also as a psuedo-liason to the staff and devs of the Wayback Machine, they are working on allowing old
5305:
Regarding that "pyramid shaped button" you mentioned, I've carefully looked for any buttons or links in the diff view, but I can't find that one. Is this, perhaps, some optional script in your configuration rather than something generic? How is that button labelled (so I could search for that label?)
4887:
The bot is designed to fix bad snapshot dates, and it did for some of them (notice the first couple edits where it changed the invalid 20180821120407 to a correct snapshot date), but the one's it didn't fix fell through and incorrectly added the 2018 year into the archivedate field. I'll check it out
3212:
driver looked ok and seemed to be working the problem is with medic I would revert the changes to init.awk. If medic gave a "Usage: medic" result it's saying it doesn't understand the arguments or missing args. If not already, use cut and paste for the ./medic command above, because the order of args
3099:
I ran it here and got the correct result. Need to see some debug output. First change driver.awk as its currently setup for GNU Parallel which you are not using. Edit driver.awk and find the commented line that says "Create index.temp entry (re-assemble when GNU Parallel" .. below that are two lines,
2837:
Looking at this more closely, the program is designed to fix existing archive.org links in an article. It's not designed to add links where none exist since that is what CB does. So it would be a significant rework to change the scope. However, if the article contained "best guess" archive.org links,
1730:
There are problems with the sourcecheck system. If there is more than 1 link there is no clear way to designate a "fail" or "pass" for each link much less to do it with a bot since the formatting is somewhat free-form. It would take a lot of work to prevent messing up the talk page and not sure if it
1314:
Are you getting anymore bad archives, as much as before. IA tech team reported to me in an email last night, "An earlier version from last week also fixed a problem in which I was returning the HTTP status of the CDX call rather than the underlying archived HTTP status code." which seems to describe
986:
labeled "Works by or about Brayton C. Ives", we find one relevant work (repeated 6 times), which already appeared among the external links in the article, and then 19 links to various volumes of the novels and tales of Robert Louis Stevenson, followed by more relevant links. I don't know why the RLS
6400:
You're trying to purge the shark bite incident from the Internet but that is going to be very difficult. Even if the news stories were removed entirely from the Internet, the story can still be cited, a live link is not required to make a citation. If the newspaper announced the story was withdrawn,
6384:
I've removed unsourced articles from Elissa Sursara's Knowledge page as the articles have been removed from each of the sources cited. I attempted this edit under a different login earlier in the week but have admittedly forgotten my user details. Nevertheless, citing Knowledge's own content removal
5590:
I understand what you are saying but to put a different way, I think what you mean is "If an article is renamed, should the wikilinks to that article, in other articles, be changed automatically by a bot to reflect the new article name". I don't know the answer and it has probably come up before but
5481:
I think it would be easier to establish some extensions to the robots.txt format instead of introducing a completely new object. (Lots of web software already has provisions to define robots.txt files, but not some other object - it could take many years before support for such a new IA object would
5309:
Regarding IABot readding archive-url links if they become available again, are you sure about that? Where is that information stored? With the contents of archive-date and archive-url gone, how could (without human assistance) a bot decide if a snapshot has the same contents as the link given in the
5187:
I can most certainly say that having IABot detect this is infeasible and would require huge scale rewrite to simply even detect duplicate, especially if they're embedded in templates. This is something I neither have the time, or am willing to do. The simple solution is to convert the reference to
5151:
do about it. Indeed, searching all the included templates and finding the reference is tedious. That's exactly why a bot should do it -- computers are far better at tedious and error-prone tasks than humans are. While it's sometimes regrettable that Knowledge allows references in templates, it does;
4392:
to only disallow URLs containing a "/wp-admin/" which removed the Wayback block. The bot processed the page probably within hours before they changed robots.txt, then uploaded the diff after the change. This is a very rare occurrence. Dealing with robots.txt on Wayback is complicated and still being
2879:
s just to get a pass from the bot, (2) Adding a dummy archive.org link like you suggested, and hope that an archived version already exists, and I suppose run this process manually, (3) Ask Citoid team to build it IA auto-archive into their Citoid API, (4) Make a request for a bot and pray for help,
2290:
Hey there, I see you put 99% for project Gutenberg, are you suggesting all the red links on guttenberg need a redirect as there are already articles for them? Because I noticed on the talk page you said there are 9,000~ gutenberg tags on wikipedia and the list has about 8,000? I ask because I notice
2171:
problem is pretty immense, and growing daily, this bot is not the only one trying to solve it. I'm not sure there would be consensus to add a top hat for dead links, partly because they are often unsolvable (no archive exists) and how common they are. All dead links are invisible tagged by inclusion
5485:
As an ad-hoc idea (which would certainly need more refinement), it could be established as a new rule that robots.txt can be applied retroactively by the site owner *only* if the robots.txt contains a line uniquely identifying the current site owner (for example by the "contract ID" with the domain
5470:
I agree with that there should be some formal (and more complicated) way for copyright owners to take down stuff regardless of time. After all, IA did not ask for permission to archive stuff in the first place, and in some legislations this could be seen as redistribution ("copying") without former
5450:
I would say that being able to communicate with the executive director and some of the devs, will more likely get us heard for changes to be pushed then the standard means at the disposal to the public as published on their site. The mechanism Green and I are trying to push is that archives should
4941:
Hello! Your bot is breaking lots of pages by causing duplicate reference definitions. Sometimes (but not always) duplicate ref markers that have the same content get folded. When your bot edits one, it always makes them different, and that results in a "duplicate reference definition" on the page.
4359:
If you mean the Wayback outage in the past hour or so, that's different. The bot processed this page about 36 hours ago, the uploading is separate from the processing. Wayback outages happen daily and the bot handles and logs those. This looks like a change in the reported robots.txt status between
3357:
Well the truth is there is no lead section because there are no sections. The lead section repeats/summarizes the body of the article's key points, a mini-article one can copy to elsewhere (such as a sub-section on McPherson in the article on near term extinction if it existed). To do that we would
2640:
1000 man-hrs at this point (development + running), a lot of hard-won lessons on how the Wayback API (doesn't) work. Or the CB source (PHP) which is even more complex. From a policy view not sure it's the best idea for a couple reasons. Ideally the snapshot date would be chosen by a human to ensure
1495:
you can't just end it like that you only gave one example right there it is not correct you need to at least do some research you know a little deeper than you already do might as well since you dug that far on ,if you are as smart asi think you are which I'll assume for now that you are, is a very
1431:
That's an easy sounding that can be complicated. It depends if the picture is Fair Use or Public Domain (or Creative Commons). If Fair Use then it is uploaded directly to this website (left side of page, box says "Tools", "Upload file"). However you will need to read up on what constitutes Fair Use
5996:
to the interface's main page. If you take a look, no tool is ready to be used on it except for OAuth. I was wondering if you could login to the interface and pick out one of the tools. First time users are forced to read and accept the ToS before using the interface, and declining will log them
5313:
Regarding inserting spaces before }}, I can see how this particular case slipped through easily (there were spaces in front of |parameter= earlier), but it would be easy to fix it by adding a rule to remove any white-space in front of the closing }} if there was no white-space in this place before
5166:
Exactly, a specialized bot that searches out and fixes duplicate refs in template but it is impractical for every bot and tool written to deal with it on their own. There are already tools that aggregate duplicate refs surely someone could expand those tools to include refs contained in templates.
5106:
I don't think there's much a bot could do about this. It won't be just this bot, by any bot, tool or AWB script - indeed any human editor - that modifies the citation for whatever reason. The problem is with the template. The refs in templates, if named, should contain a unique identifier (such as
3269:
Good, I'm glad—happy to help. I've been getting "Usage: medic" ever since I first ran medic, if that helps. I thought it was part of the output. I was directly copy/pasting the command from the bug output and from your suggestion with the aforementioned results. Not sure if we've hit a dead end. I
2893:
No it doesn't trigger saves on working sites but it could easily, just a simple GET command. The easiest way right now would be (2) since the code is working. For (2) the program will take care of things automatically - it will change the dummy snapshot date to the working snapshot date, or remove
2717:
I understand better what you're saying and actually that would be a useful tool since it would be run manually and you could check the results. Let's see.. if your comfortable with AWB and unix, WaybackMedic could do this with some modification I would be happy to provide. What environment are you
1901:
Cyberbot is not adding a badlink. Cyberbot is moving an archive URL to the proper field. I have no idea, why there is an archive of an archive, but the URL parameter needs to have the original URL of the page being displayed, especially a broken WebCite makes it impossible to figure out what the
477:
on 12 November which I subsequently reverted, leaving your edit nowhere to go for the time being. Once the Rfc change is properly implemented (by him or another editor) your edit can be reapplied. I will be happy to apply that edit for you, upon request. Please wait for the re-implementation of
445:
the article twice. I edited it multiple times this morning, possibly immediately after a revert, which undoubtedly appeared to you as a "revert." I have no intention, desire, or time to sustain a revert war. I had hoped that you would follow the references, have an "ah-ha..." moment and leave a
5774:
from A15 road. You've changed the date from 11 July 2007 to 20070711. The article header states to use DMY dates as most of the other dates are. I assume there's a reason for this (IE wayback machine states in YMD dates) but there is no edit summary to go with the diff so I do not know why you've
5427:
I agree that robots.txt as a takedown request mechanism is not ideal. At the very least they can change mechanism easily because it's not a legal question but internal policy and technology. The problem you mention is real, where a domain expires and the new owner sets up a robots.txt .. this has
5405:
In either case, I see a serious long-term problem here for Knowledge: Assume a site with lots of valueable contents and very permissive robots.txt, so that most of the contents gets archived at IA. Now, some years (or decades) in the future, the site owner changes (long-term, this will happen for
5355:
Hi Cyberpower678! Thanks for the clarification, much appreciated. However, if it is only a question of time before those links will come back eventually (if they were disabled retroactively, that is), we could leave them in place as well and just wait a couple of months (or years). Obviously, the
4912:
though I'm confident it will come back to haunt me. It is a problem involving redirects and other non-200 pages of which there are a variety each need special handing. I got the major ones and will try to deal with others if/when they appear. Wayback likes to put the new URL/snapshot in different
4597:
The archive-it is a branded service for orgs that want their own wayback machine, I don't think a URL conversion would be a good idea as they may not be the same databases. If you mean creating a wayback snapshot then converting, there is the problem of snapshot date has to be near the archive-it
1998:
The Board of Trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation has appointed a committee to lead the search for the foundation’s next Executive Director. One of our first tasks is to write the job description of the executive director position, and we are asking for input from the Wikimedia community. Please
1964:
My point isn't about the bot removing the webcite archives, my point is the URL field needs the original URL field so people can easily see what the archive link was supposed to be archiving. Sure it's printed on the top of the snapshot, but what if WebCite goes down, crashes, their data centers
1223:
Thx, GreenC. First, I couldn't see how 'cbignore' would solve the problem. Second, I didn't know that 'tlx' needed to be omitted if I was going to use it. Thirdly, I still couldn't understand how changing the bot flag from 'false' to 'true' (or was it the other way around?) was going to solve the
1034:
Well, my feeling is that a link to works that may or may not be by or about the subject of the article doesn't really enhance the article. If the current method produces such links, it ought to be changed. It will probably require personal curation—you know, an actual personal assessment of the
5572:
There are lot of article titles has been charged, and most users don't notice until somebody edit the page that does had a link to the article that had a title has been charged. Should there been a bot that can automatically edit the link to the article where the title has been recently changed?
2674:
Very helpful to hear the backstory—thank you. I was thinking more of a single-pass run, and less of a bot than a userscript that would save myself a few minutes on each article I write. I used to spend the time archiving links, but now when I write an article with 30–60 links, it's a significant
2541:
filled out automatically in a citation, as your second example did on C678's page. Is that something your bot is prepared to handle? If so, when will it add the archiveurls and is there a way to make sure it gets to a page within 24 hours, etc. (I imagine there might be some pushback if it added
1124:
sopt=t worked for this case. It means if any future books are uploaded using only "James Bagnall" they won't be seen but if you put more emphasis on false positives than false negatives sopt=t will work. My preference is to allow in a few false positives so as to not cause false negatives in the
5381:
I'm party to some of those conversations and although IA says they would like to change, I don't think IA will change its takedown request policy for legal reasons (though they might change the request mechanism). Content owners can make take down requests of copyrighted material. But I'm not a
5252:
IMO, the edit summary is not sufficient. Instead, it should specify the exact type and for each of them the exact number of changes carried out. If there are many changes, perhaps different types of changes should be split into several subsequent edits, making it possible for users to check and
5256:
In general, I find it problematic to remove valid archive-url links just because later changes to robots.txt cause archive.org to no longer display the contents. Ideally, archive.org should adhere to the contents of the robots.txt file at the time the snapshot was taken, but this is beyond our
1062:
is called a custom search (see the docs) however it has trade offs. It's brittle, prone to future problems and lack of maintenance as changes occur at Internet Archive. That's why the template exists to address these problems. Sometimes the trade off makes sense, other times not. I make custom
1644:. I don't know which archiveurl= parameter it was trying to fix, but it appears to have replaced all the newlines in the article with ***!!***, thus rendered the whole article pretty nigh unreadable. I've reverted the change, so you will need to look back in the history to oldid:722269132. -- 3140:
is a link to my installation (removed all but the last attempt). I recompiled after changing those eight lines in driver.awk and I'm not getting "article.waybackmedic.txt" in the wm-XXX directory. Any ideas? I didn't get any error messages or special output. (You can see in the link that it
1798:
It's the same software bug noted above, it impacted 10 out of 1500 articles edited, or about half of one percent. The bug is fixed, the impacted articles were corrected, and the bot will not be editing those articles again. (Keeping on this page since multiple threads on the same topic). --
2147:
Hi Green Cardamom, I came across the useful work your GreenCbot is doing with dead links. Is it possible to automatically assign a tag on the top of the page and/or (hidden but visible for maintenance workers) category to it? Because now it appears very small in the list of references, e.g.
1365:
I also just deployed a massive update to Cyberbot that should fix a zillion bugs that were reported on the talk page. The scope of the change may have broken something else that I haven't seen, so please let me know if Cyberbot starts acting wierd as of the last hour of posting this.
5339:
snapshots to remain functional even when newer snapshots get blocked by robots.txt. The good news, all the current snapshots that have been disabled retroactively, still actually exist on their servers, so the archives will eventually come back if they were disabled retroactively.—
4038:
Interesting. During the last batch run, the bot was using a new framework for editing (Pywikibot) and there was also a bug in the bot code with " so for some reason Pywikibot decided to create a page if it was missing. It effected 7 articles (now fixed). The " bug is also fixed. --
2741:
I'm comfortable with AWB and Unix. I prefer to edit in OS X, so I have run AWB in Windows when necessary (though I'm open to other ways of running AWB). But the OS X should be fine with the Unix bit. This sounds really great if you could help. Also thanks for coordinating with IA
1922:
field should be the original URL not an archive URL (archive.org or webcite). Confusing when there are two archive URLs in a template plus the IA API provides a third option. I would probably go with what is known working, the API result 200, which I believe is what happened. --
3288:
I suspect it's an OS X issue with the command line parsing library (Docopt). You gave it a good go and almost there I think. If there was an OS X shell account I could ssh into I would be glad to try, but understand if you want to try other options. To save a page to Wayback:
926:
As a bildungsroman, it has one major theme throughout, the disciplining of the hero's emotional and moral life. We learn to go against "the first mistaken impulse of ] undisciplined heart", a theme which is repeated throughout all the relationships and characters in the book.
1339:
Good to hear, hope that is it. They are having challenges. Short outages daily. Connection timeouts. Also saw a case where it reported a match in wayback, then tried again and it reported none found, then tried again and matched - intermittent result. I started today running
3179:
When I run medic I get "Usage: medic" and then the bunch of flags but still no debug output in the data folder. I was playing around with it a bit more and changed the executable links in init.awk to be direct, in case that was the issue, and now I get this when running
5310:
url parameter, unless the snapshot was taken at the same time as indicated by access-date? Even a human may not be able to sort it out any more later on, if, for example, the original url has gone dead in the meanwhile, so there is nothing to compare with anymore.
2536:
Sorry, I meant case two on C678's page. (Usually when I test links in the Wayback it automatically archives the page, so I'd have to experiment to try that test.) BUT regardless of whether IA is doing that in the background, my concern is the security of having
2098:
Is there a list somewhere of people/bots who are creating Internet Archive search queries? We're looking into what raw Lucene syntax we need to support in our search interface, and it appears that there are several people/bots creating such searches. Thanks!
2846:
and archivedate=March 1, 2015. Then run the program and if this link doesn't exist at that snapshot, it will be deleted -- or if there is a better snapshot date such as March 15 2015 it will change to that (it works by picking the closest available). --
1344:
which looks for and corrects 4 problems. In the first 250 articles checked (from the 90k+ CB has edited since Dec) it reported problems in 30 articles (about 12%). Will get a bigger sample tomorrow after I manually verify the 30 did the right thing --
2585:
template. If you want a link archived on Wayback, then it will be done automatically by background processes. If you want a link that is otherwise working and not dead to be added as an archiveurl to a template, there is no auto mechanism for that. --
6204:
is open from Monday, 00:00, 21 November through Sunday, 23:59, 4 December to all unblocked users who have registered an account before Wednesday, 00:00, 28 October 2016 and have made at least 150 mainspace edits before Sunday, 00:00, 1 November 2016.
1046:
Thank you for bringing it to my attention. I do manually check each search (~93% are rejected on average) and sometimes make a mistake as the data can be hard to interpret why the IA search engine included a certain book. The template documentation
3248:-- On auto archival, I reported your test links and the response from IA: "We have discovered, and are fixing, a breakdown on our end that was effecting the timely archiving of new links from Knowledge." Thanks for the discovery of the problem. -- 105:
You can use this user right to perform maintenance, answer edit requests, and make any other simple and generally uncontroversial edits to templates, modules, and edit notices. You can also use it to enact more complex or controversial edits,
4360:
the time of processing and now. That's dependent on the remote site operator and just looks like bad timing. (if it's due to a Wayback outage one would see every article processed during the outage with similar removal of links). --
3748: 3154:
The dropbox is helpful. It doesn't look like medic ran, only the driver front-end which downloads the article.txt and creates the data directories. Driver then calls medic. Try this to run medic manually with debug output ("-d y"):
743:. Coincidentally I was in the middle of a more drastic rewrite of that para., which I've added. Hope you think it's better overall - less promotional. If you want to make other changes to the article, let me know, and I'll work on 1840:
It doesn't redirect but is actually a way back archive page that I webcited lol. I noticed a while back that web archive links rot/_expire eventually but webcite seemed more lasting. Which is why I objected to the bot's changes
3199:(Caret pointing to the b in "urllib") Also I'm not even getting the right output anymore. I can revert if need be, but I wonder whether a badly linked executable was responsible for the silent lack of output in the first place 5088:
Because the bot edit, the content of the references with the same name doesn't match, and the reference error is generated. This makes the reference difficult to view. (Sorry for not indenting; the formatting isn't easy.) --
2396:: I see what you are saying, sorry. Yes that was a bad edit. I have a list of articles to process and I thought they were all mainspace. I see some WP mixed in. I'll remove those before proceeding. Thanks for the notice. -- 3764: 3749: 5047:
tag; name "La_Liga_fair_play_rules" defined multiple times with different content (see the help page)." in large red letters because of the edit your bot made. The previous edit doesn't have that error in the references.
2622:...returning to this—don't you think it would be valuable to have such an "auto mechanism" for that? I imagine it'd be easier to repurpose one of the bots already doing the work than for me to write my own script/code 3550:
in that it adds a partial accessdate to the cite templates. Partial accessdates now trigger an error since the last update to the cite templates. Can you change BOT to add a full accessdate to the citations. Thanks.
2015: 1057:
has more info on how anyone can fine tune the results, such as done here with the custom search. Unfortunately the goal of 0% false positives is unworkable for a number of reasons. The solution just implemented for
4258: 3112:.. run that command and it will re-run medic with debugging output using the data cached in the ~/data/main/wm-XXX directory which was just created by driver. The second line of the "./bug -v" output should show 2575:"cases in which editors specifically want the bot to do the work of archiving their links for them" .. you'll need to be more explicit what you mean. If you want a dead link to be archived in the template, add a 5364:, but just deferring this particular task for a while would safe us a lot of unnecessary edits which always carry some risk that something wents wrong and which bind precious editor time to check the bot edits. 4344:, where WaybackMedic 2 hastily added a deadlink tag while archive.org was briefly offline for maintenance. Perhaps the bot should be programmed to add the tag only if a deadlink is still dead 24 hours later? — 3462: 2868:
Ah, but it won't save a copy of the live site, if it's still up? CB does that, right? What would you recommend as the best way forward for this? I see a few options: (1) A variation on tagging live links as
6087: 4870:
You can't really blame the bot for that. Those archive snapshots, based on the date stamp in the URL are from 2018. If those snapshots actually work then there'a a bug in the wayback machine somewhere.—
5503:
Matthiaspaul, I'm copying the above and sending it to Wayback credited to you. I don't know if they are still looking for ideas but it's a fine one. If anything comes of it will let you know. Thanks. --
3778: 1993: 277:
Hi thanks for the notice. Never seen that before. I don't know if the problem is with my script or AWB itself. Since I don't know what caused it, what I'll do is add a sanity check if the edit size is :
6216:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 5167:
This is not trivial BTW and it far exceeds anything my bot and other bots are designed for. Also I'm curious why an error message isn't already being generated when the duplicate ref names exist. --
720:, a 1971 movie released thru United Artists that features Robert De Niro in an early appearance. If the source I used isn't reliable, then by all means please remove it from the list. Thank you. 5260:
By removing the links your bot added spaces in front of the closing }} template bracket. While only a cosmetical issue, this looks ugly. The bot should adjust to whatever style was used before.
4639: 3045:
Shouldn't need to mess with projects again once this is working, it will always be project "main" .. it's a feature when dealing with 100s of thousands of articles to break it up into batches.
2683: 4644:
Another issue that just occurred to me, which apparently WaybackMedic does not address yet. Quite often I see cases in which the link to the WBM snapshot inside a citation template is in the
3734:
I just left that editor the following note: "I am the original author. Your edits /comment were not helpful." Then I saw a similar note from another editor, and another, more serious one.
6506:
deletion discussion). It seems users DGG and SwisterTwister routinely vote for deletion together without offering analysis, so I wanted to get a third-party involved. I'm not fishing for a
5992:
That interface I have been working. I've finished most of the needed backend, and am now starting on its frontend. That being said, I need your opinion, and feel to survey other users.
3795: 3070: 2027: 832:
to be his finest work, ranking the "Tempest" chapter (chapter 55,LV - the story of Ham and the storm and the shipwreck) the standard by which the worlds great fiction should be judged.
485:. If there's anything you can think of to explain it to him better than I was able to, I'd sure appreciate it, cuz I'm not sure I'm getting the point across clearly enough. Cordially, 4552: 6232: 2233:: Yeah. The WaybackMedic bot made some errors in about 300 articles so I wrote a patch to return and fix them but the patch created new problems by undoing dead links that were legit 1170:
Thanks for removing spamy link. I tried, but failed, and got tied up in knots when making enquiries about how to resolve the matter! Thanks for putting me out of my misery! Regards --
5249:
Due to the large number of changes the diffs no longer show the individual changes but just some huge blocks to the effect that it is very difficult to manually check the bot edits.
4179: 5234: 148: 6605: 4564: 4276: 2093: 2687: 2484: 4495: 3494: 1781:
Could you please explain in plain English what is going on with this article? The last two edits are making me very concerned. Please reply to my own talk page. Thanks. --
6474: 5659:
There is an ongoing debate regarding Zeek(company) page. I wanted to ask you for your opinion on the matter. I do have COI with Zeek, but I believe the article can meet
3499: 3271: 1241:
Yeah if you don't know how the moving parts work it can be mysterious. There probably needs to be better documentation with clear examples. Maybe I can work on that. --
5478:
For the bulk of the contents, robots.txt (despite all its weaknesses in definition) does a reasonable good job - at least for as long as it isn't applied retroactively.
3440: 1515: 1501: 4097:
Didn't know about that, thanks. This is an uncommon edit and fortunately limited to probably less than 50 articles. I'll fix them with AWB in the next day or two. --
2306:
I may have confused things feel free to revert. My intention was 99% complete in terms of adding the template to available articles, not in creating new articles. --
2207:
These links just "helpfully" redirect to a generic front page, but they are dead in terms of the relevant content. I'm not sure what to do: I would have thought that
1202:
just type the letters {{cbignore}} into the article (without the tlx part, which is for displaying the name of the template without actually using the template). --
6104: 4489: 3809:
I've re-inserted line breaks removed by WaybackMedic 2 from citations kept in vertical format. Is it possible for the bot to respect such formatting for the future?
2460: 4681: 4454: 5127:
I agree with GreenC, this can't be pinned on the bot. The blame lies on the editor(s) that created the duplicate reference to begin with instead of simply using
2542:
archiveurl params to all URLs sitewide, but I'm talking about cases in which editors specifically want the bot to do the work of archiving their links for them.)
6039:
Just found the ToS. Looks really good. Is it saying that when an edit request is made, it is done as the user and not InternetArchiveBot? That would be cool. --
5243: 5052:
says that citation errors are dependent on using English in your user preferences; do you not have that setting? Maybe there's another setting tha reveals them.
4657:{{cite web |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101208180142/http://www.abheritage.ca/abpolitics/administration/maps_choice.php?Year=1935&Constit=Vegreville }} 2635:
Medic is a 1-pass bot, to do what your suggesting would require a continually running bot and that is CB. If you are serious about making a bot.. take a look at
1871:
That is true, good idea as robots.txt can make pages disappear from Wayback, or even disappear for unknown reason. Rather then battling with the bot, there is a
713: 5273: 6099: 5306:(However, if it would be a client-side script, it would not be a general solution, as I (and many others) normally have scripts disabled for security reasons.) 5063: 2108: 6433:
kick in? Good idea on the archives. I wouldn't think the archive servers are on Australian soil or anywhere near. That would make it a bit difficult. Cheers
6250: 1631: 1511: 1497: 110:
those edits are first made to a test sandbox, and their technical reliability as well as their consensus among other informed editors has been established.
6081: 4942:
This hides references, and references are fundamental to Knowledge's reliability and at the core of its definition of notability. Here's an example edit:
4687:
This is a feature in IABot it already fixed a lot. Once it is running again I assume this feature will still be active but don't know for sure. Another is
3800: 3263: 3063: 2862: 1999:
take a few minutes and complete this survey to help us better understand community and staff expectations for the Wikimedia Foundation Executive Director.
1264: 6450: 4204: 4196: 1496:
unintellectual subject so just because I have OCD sorry for the caps I humbly ask you to just put another possibility that it may be used for thank you
1010:
It's because "Stevenson, Fanny Van de Grift, 1840-1914" (same birth-death) and "St. Ives" are being matched by the IA search engine to the search string
5813: 1965:
have a fire, flood, or something that permanently destroys the snapshot. Then no one knows what that WebCite URL was holding in place of the original.
405: 3516: 1586: 3897: 2483:
on C678's page. If I read your use case #2 correctly—that it would add archiveurls to citations that lack it—what would you make of my use case here:
6120: 6111: 6105: 5973: 5966: 4553:
http://wayback.archive-it.org/2217/20101208180333/http://www.abheritage.ca/abpolitics/administration/maps_choice.php?Constit=Vegreville&Year=1935
3527: 3507: 3500: 2509: 2473: 2461: 2142: 1653: 1451: 982:
Just so you know, it seems that the "Works By" project is linking to irrelevant works. For example, in the link to the Internet Archive you added to
5625: 4529: 4483: 4252: 6386: 2759:, in order to compile the program, I don't have access to an OS X system. Nim installs in a single directory not invasive of the system. Recommend 1765: 1746: 1578: 1567: 694: 416: 3609: 2411: 2388: 2370: 6324: 6305: 6181: 6054: 6015:
Maybe the feature to run on multiple pages requires the editor already have other permissions such as AWB. Same with managing entire domains. --
4408: 4162:
I just wanted to let you know that I highly appreciate the work of your bot, fixing all these archive links on Knowledge. Thank you very much. --
3735: 3699: 3521: 3310: 2711: 2555:
WM doesn't create new archiveurl links. It deletes or modifies existing links that have problems. Thus "Medic". New additions are done by CB. --
6071: 6030: 5462: 5199: 5142: 4836: 4812: 3869: 2252: 1938: 1913: 1154: 1140: 455: 6499: 6488: 5536: 5519: 5443: 5422: 5397: 5326: 5297: 4335: 4329: 4221: 4192: 3818: 2224: 2193: 2161: 2136: 1674: 1304: 5498: 5376: 5350: 4796: 4565:
https://web.archive.org/web/20101208180142/http://www.abheritage.ca/abpolitics/administration/maps_choice.php?Year=1935&Constit=Vegreville
428: 4267:, but when Wayback Medic 2 noticed the archiveurl had gone dead, it marked the ref with "dead link" even though the primary is still active. 3385: 3116:
then cd to that directory and look for a file called "article.waybackmedic.txt" .. this is updated article (article.txt is the original). --
2187: 1827: 1814: 1626: 294: 6420: 6402: 6299: 5892: 4728: 4710: 4631: 4613: 3849: 3683: 3663: 3645: 2703:. Basically, I don't feel that I can trust the silent archive mechanism but I see value in being able to run it myself and see the results. 2443:
Many thanks to you Good Sir, may the WaybackMedic find continuous blessings and wellness ongoing! SoS was answered and appreciated. "Dutch"
2085: 2071: 1256: 1224:
problem of a spamy link! But 'failed' was brilliant! Glad to get a third party response and succinct solution to the fundamental problem! --
1217: 594: 6519: 6511: 5182: 5122: 5036: 5016: 4996: 4979: 4559:
The URL scheme is obviously related to Wayback Machine, although there is no snapshot with that particular time stamp on the "actual" WBM:
4048: 3936: 3728: 1969: 1951: 1866: 1850: 1842: 1078: 1041: 1029: 799: 782: 647: 470: 6442: 6307: 5161: 4961: 4130: 4112: 3595: 3581: 5756: 4881: 4430: 4375: 3908: 2349: 2321: 1118: 864:, who normally had little regard for Dickens, confessed the durability of this one novel, belonging to "the memories and myths of life". 387: 5667:
if improvements are made. The company has won many awards over the years and has gotten sufficient coverage in reliable sources such as
4353: 4287: 2199: 1959: 1896: 142: 6466: 6373: 4771: 3471: 3228: 3207: 3174: 3149: 3131: 3094: 2995: 2978: 2950: 2921: 2888: 2823: 2798: 2778: 2750: 2736: 2656: 2617: 2601: 2570: 2550: 2531: 1785: 1724: 1401: 1377: 1360: 279:
50% of the original article it halts with a warning. I might also retry AWB on Champ Clark and see if it can replicate the problem. --
244: 224: 5871: 3985: 3833: 400: 5853: 4689:{{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/December 8, 2012/https://web.archive.org/web/20101208180142/http://www.abheritage.ca }} 4509: 2718:
working in with AWB, Windows? Do you run a VirtualBox Linux? I think Linux will be required, it's not a script but a compiled binary.
1773: 1606: 1284: 1005: 229: 6394: 3713:
You're right. Don't know what I was thinking. The "needs to be entirely rewritten" tag was ridiculous lost my presence of mind. --
2336:, those sections are specifically about asking archive.org to create an archive. Is your edit there correct, are or those URLs with 729: 5725: 5680: 4736: 1090: 482: 6161: 5585: 4909: 3621: 943: 936: 6379: 5736: 5720: 5653:
Sorry for the hassle but I have been following your work on Knowledge for a while now. I would like to hear your input regarding
5402:
To me, a robots.txt file by a site owner and a take down request by a copyright holder of some contents are two different things.
5056: 2495: 1099:. Following the link does find some of his publications, but also one by a very different James Bagnall. Not being familiar with 600: 5245:, where GreenC bot removed 4 KB of contents from the article leaving only a mostly meaningless edit summary "(WaybackMedic 2)". 4591: 4572: 3328: 5610: 5001:
I still don't see it. You'll need to more explicit. There's only one ref named "soccerway" and only ref that uses that URL. --
3141:
downloads the article but doesn't change the archiveurl from the dummy to the updated URL.) Appreciate your help with all this
2327: 2300: 1977: 1756: 1715: 954: 359: 6587: 2452: 4505: 4502:. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. 4032: 3603: 2838:
it could automatically verify and fix those. There would be almost no coding changes needed. For example say there is a link
2630: 2285: 1602: 1599:. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. 1280: 1277:. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. 190: 124: 120: 5948: 4302:
then it assumes a human determined it was dead and won't try to second guess. At some point we need a bot that checks every
3331:, but I am fine with your changes, for what it's worth. wp:lead asks for it to include "any prominent controversies". Best. 494: 6246: 5845: 5147:
I'm confused, since you say "I don't think there's much a bot can do about this", then actually outline exactly what a bot
5098: 4954: 3157:./medic -p "main" -n "User:Czar/drafts/WaybackMedic test" -s "/path/WaybackMecic/data/main/wm-0709212754N/article.txt" -d y 2843: 2023: 542:
Thank you for your contributions to this encyclopedia using 21st century technology. I hope you don't get any unneccessary
6008: 5784: 6275: 4534: 4462: 4184:
Helena Bonham Carter did not play the role of Queen Elizabeth II in "The King's Speech." She played Elizabeth's mother.
3948: 3783: 3295:
Might take a few minutes to show up. The archive said they plan on doing it automatically for all links on Knowledge. --
3069:
Okay—got it running without errors, but the output in the data folder doesn't appear to reflect any changes. I ran it on
2607: 1680: 6638: 5059:
that your bot edited, there are really two "soccerway" references. One was edited by your bot. The other comes from the
4446: 3013:
step and manually create two directories ~/WaybackMedic/meta/main and ~/WaybackMedic/data/main then modify project.cfg
2808:
into a local directory and run "nim c medic.nim" and make sure it compiles without error (might have some warnings). --
2204:{ { dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic } } { { cbignore|bot=medic } } (sorry, can't remember proper way to untemplate) 1519: 1505: 6452: 6088:
Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Cannabis#Do_we_need_to_do_some_consolidation_of_multiple_overlapping_US_cannabis_articles.3F
4248: 2513: 2271: 4171: 4091: 1233: 1179: 271: 6095: 4985: 4767: 1530: 661: 3806: 2763:(the first section "Install"). Also will need GNU Awk version 4+ if not already. Ping me when these are working. -- 1486: 4928: 4903: 4235: 3967: 3668:
It's currently being tested (or the testing system is being developed, not sure where they are at the moment). --
2056:
It's a bot not an end-user tool. It will hopefully eventually process all articles that contain wayback links. --
2038: 1968:
Well, you would if you'd gone back to the revision dated whenever the BOT made the changes I've been reverting lol
1383: 1341: 1103: 1051: 460: 6134: 6131: 4745: 4068: 3952: 2679: 2050: 1425: 6528: 6242: 5780: 4936: 3536: 2019: 950: 261:
twice. In the process of reverting to the last good version, I removed <ref name="Allan, Chantal page 17": -->
128: 5046:
At the given "La Liga" link, in the references section at reference #40, I see "Cite error: Invalid <ref: -->
4852: 3457: 2505: 2480: 1950:, none of this requires removing the webcite link, which always shows at the top the link that's been archived. 1686: 993: 166: 6352: 5676: 4693:{{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101208180142/http://www.abheritage.ca |date=December 8, 2010 }} 4147: 3351: 2721:
Interesting about the archive test failing.. I'll bring this up with IA, that was understood to be working. --
2333: 1539: 871:, through the voice of David Copperfield himself, and was the first Dickens novel to do so. It is considered a 725: 5229: 3560: 2701: 300: 5819: 5705: 5631: 5564: 4494:
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Knowledge appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited
4239: 4200: 3991: 3915: 3429: 1591:
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Knowledge appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited
1269:
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Knowledge appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited
6534: 6176: 4864: 4341: 4079: 3974: 3435: 3137: 1858: 759: 6573: 6257: 6225: 6091: 4009: 4005: 3743: 3707: 2280: 1421: 700: 377: 339: 3976:
but apparently missed some, if you see any more please go ahead and correct it, thanks for the report. --
3342: 1326: 6339:. Check the interface info page. I gave credit to you. Let me know if you want me to change anything?— 6237: 6152: 5621: 5581: 5333: 4458: 4389: 4385: 4214: 4073: 3420: 2636: 2421: 1774: 744: 560: 6592: 6145: 5982: 4578:
on Knowledge. I wonder if we should convert those links to actual WBM snapshots, too. From the homepage
3776:
guidelines. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at
3547: 972: 364: 5776: 4421:
OK, thanks for the quick diagnosis. Glad it wasn't a problem that affects a large number of articles. —
3791: 3416: 2756: 1762: 1721: 1592: 43: 6554: 4388:
which would cause a Wayback policy block due to "Disallow: /". The site owners updated it on or about
2606:
Your last example is what I'm after. I thought that's what was happening in the second replacement in
320: 5987: 5672: 5242:
while I appreciate most of the work done by your bot, I'd like to criticize bot edits like this one:
4943: 4582:
it seems this project is related to Internet Archive, although it has a completely different look. --
4138: 2804:
Ok great. Nim recently upgraded to 0.14 and I am on 0.13 .. it should be OK, but as a test could you
2448: 2384: 2345: 1162: 999:
Actually, I've moved the page because there's no source referring to him with a middle initial.... -
721: 115: 1315:
the bug of bad archives with a non-200 OK being mistaken for a good archive with a 200 OK response.—
818:
for two years between 1848 and 1850. Seven novels proceed it, and seven novels would come after it,
134:
If you do not want this user right, you may ask any administrator to remove it for you at any time.
6493: 6413: 6366: 6317: 6292: 6047: 6023: 5957: 5898: 5885: 5806: 5749: 5603: 5512: 5436: 5390: 5290: 5175: 5115: 5029: 5009: 4972: 4921: 4896: 4829: 4789: 4703: 4606: 4476: 4401: 4368: 4322: 4264: 4105: 3942: 3929: 3890: 3862: 3773: 3721: 3676: 3638: 3574: 3378: 3303: 3256: 3221: 3167: 3124: 3056: 2971: 2914: 2906:
using any article name. The new article text will be in ~/data/wm-XXXX if any changes were made.--
2855: 2816: 2771: 2729: 2649: 2594: 2563: 2524: 2404: 2363: 2314: 2245: 2180: 2129: 2064: 1931: 1889: 1807: 1739: 1667: 1560: 1463: 1444: 1394: 1353: 1249: 1210: 1133: 1071: 1022: 775: 687: 587: 466: 287: 252: 217: 95: 66: 716:. I have added another film on the list that I believe to be in the public domain by the name of 6332: 6063: 6000: 5454: 5342: 5191: 5134: 4873: 4804: 4001: 3997: 3841: 3651: 3424: 2985:
Unable to find .../WaybackMedic/meta/main.auth - Unable to create .../WaybackMedic/meta/main/auth
2220: 1905: 1417: 1150: 1114: 5772: 4393:
worked out. For now the best we can do is report what the page is at the time of processing. --
6135:
https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Gustave_Whitehead&diff=749414086&oldid=749389266
6132:
https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Gustave_Whitehead&diff=749389266&oldid=746210088
5859: 5617: 5592: 5577: 5532: 5494: 5418: 5372: 5322: 5269: 4272: 4054: 4027: 3955:
by BOT. It has changed from web.archive.org to www.webcitation.org but left it with an invalid
3453: 2983:
Had to modify a few things in project.cfg (should that be added to 0INSTALL?) but I'm stuck on
2104: 1649: 1457: 868: 474: 30: 3213:
is significant. Beyond that I really don't know why (and I need to sign off for tonight). --
6634: 6583: 6213: 5944: 5225: 4761: 4121:
Thanks, I probably have located and fixed about 20 up to now as they pop-up on my watchlist.
3787: 2032: 2005: 1752: 1711: 1641: 1633: 1574: 1547: 1535: 1096: 846: 674: 643: 355: 57: 1125:
future but it's a personal call on an article by article basis and what the results are. --
6615: 6524: 6258: 6224:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The 4440: 4188: 4044: 3981: 3829: 3336: 2444: 2393: 2380: 2341: 2157: 2041:, but I'm still confused. I think I'd like to test it. Would you please walk me through it? 1707: 1700: 1474: 977: 794: 754: 451: 424: 267: 99: 6510:, but I am looking for a legitimate discussion if possible. Thanks for any consideration. 5935:
Thanks for all of your contributions to improve Knowledge, and have a happy and enjoyable
4016:. I assume this isn't meant to happen. I have redirected both to the existing articles. - 767:
No problem, your edit is a big improvement. I probably won't edit more for the moment. --
8: 6406: 6390: 6359: 6310: 6285: 6270: 6040: 6016: 5878: 5867: 5799: 5742: 5689: 5596: 5505: 5429: 5383: 5283: 5168: 5108: 5022: 5002: 4965: 4914: 4889: 4822: 4818: 4782: 4778: 4724: 4696: 4677: 4627: 4599: 4587: 4469: 4394: 4361: 4315: 4167: 4098: 3922: 3883: 3855: 3714: 3669: 3659: 3631: 3617: 3567: 3541: 3479: 3371: 3296: 3249: 3214: 3160: 3117: 3049: 2964: 2907: 2848: 2809: 2786: 2764: 2722: 2642: 2587: 2556: 2517: 2397: 2356: 2307: 2238: 2173: 2122: 2081: 2057: 2046: 1924: 1882: 1835: 1800: 1732: 1660: 1553: 1437: 1432:
and provide appropriate rationales etc.. if it is a public domain then it is uploaded to
1387: 1346: 1242: 1229: 1203: 1175: 1126: 1064: 1015: 768: 680: 580: 553: 280: 210: 119:
and make sure you understand its contents. In particular, you should read the section on
3530:
request has been approved. Thank you for your patience and cooperation in the trials. —
3275: 2955:
Great! Random is related to the change from .13 to .14 .. in line 2 of medic.nim change
2844:
https://web.archive.org/web/20150301000000/http://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/1317
2485:
User talk:Cyberpower678/Archive 34#Citation bot for links that are not yet dead cont.27d
836:
remembered hiding under a small table as a boy to hear installments read by his mother.
6173: 5157: 5094: 4992: 4950: 4540: 4309: 4227: 4064: 3739: 3703: 3412: 3100:
comment them out; and below that are 6 commented out lines, uncomment them. Now re-run
2873: 2579: 2230: 2216: 2201:
removed templates showing a couple of links as dead: it removed two strings like this:
2168: 1945: 1309: 1146: 1110: 879: 490: 392:
Warmest Wishes for Health, Wealth and Wisdom through the Holidays and the Coming Year!
83: 5410:
to contents available at the same time, not for contents in the future or in the past.
5382:
lawyer. Also many links removed by WaybackMedic have nothing to do with robots.txt --
6438: 6200: 6182: 5766: 5528: 5490: 5414: 5368: 5318: 5265: 4860: 4846: 4821:
worked because the space after the $ but the shell interprets $ C as a variable. --
4525: 4516:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
4268: 4126: 4087: 4018: 3963: 3902: 3814: 3591: 3556: 3449: 3318: 2694: 2676: 2116: 2100: 1875: 1645: 1622: 1613:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
1300: 1291:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
1196: 1095:
I noticed that you added {{Internet Archive author |sname=James Eustace Bagnall}} to
740: 397: 6430: 6209: 6167: 6130:
GreenC bot appears to be in an edit war with Fluxbot, as indicated by these edits:
5793: 5732: 5716: 5701: 5221: 5049: 4757: 4544: 4426: 4349: 3391: 3359: 3081: 2332:
Hi! I see that you're doing some cleanup of archive.org links in articles. Over at
2296: 2149: 930: 734: 91: 87: 17: 6515: 6141: 6125: 5911: 5842: 5215: 4040: 3977: 3825: 3693: 3365: 3332: 2270:
This message is being sent to inform you that there is currently a discussion at
2258: 2153: 1973: 1955: 1854: 1846: 1824: 1793: 1782: 1690: 983: 856: 447: 420: 345: 263: 149:
Request fully-protected templates or modules be downgraded to template protection
3405: 2895: 2842:
with an access-date of March 1 2015. You would set a "best guess" of archiveurl=
2839: 2805: 1552:- Clever. Thanks for the laugh - and not having to deal with a real dispute! -- 262:, but I don't think that caused any harm and it seemed to also fix a ref error. 6344: 6281: 6265: 6221: 5863: 5664: 4720: 4673: 4623: 4583: 4163: 4059:
Hey, so I see you were right about the changes that I made. I was being grumpy
3911:. I only saw your message at the top of the bot's talk page after I hit save. — 3655: 3613: 3324: 3280: 3201: 3143: 3088: 2989: 2944: 2882: 2792: 2744: 2705: 2624: 2611: 2544: 2489: 2259: 2077: 2042: 1369: 1318: 1225: 1187: 1171: 1035:
works linked to—if it's going to be done right. Thanks for fixing this one. -
964: 908: 861: 574: 548: 239: 185: 161: 6547: 6540: 5904: 5467:
Thanks to you both. It's good to know the problem is actively being worked on.
3475: 313: 306: 6479: 6217: 6156: 6115: 5977: 5660: 5153: 5090: 4988: 4946: 4060: 3912: 3531: 3511: 3486: 2926:
All right, I'll give it a go—thanks for your help! Getting this error on the
2898:
and follow steps 2-6 in the 0INSTALL text shouldn't take very long. Then run
2468: 2275: 1037: 1001: 989: 892: 873: 788: 748: 486: 434: 3291: 71: 6434: 5965: 4856: 4521: 4517: 4499: 4122: 4083: 3959: 3879: 3810: 3587: 3552: 3108:(view info) which will show useful information. The third line starts with 2639:(Python-like) in Wayback Medic's GitHub account, I figure development : --> 1640:
Hi. Could you take a look at the recent edit by your bot (WaybackMedic) to
1618: 1614: 1492: 1411: 1296: 1292: 1270: 1059: 884: 709: 499: 393: 5828: 5640: 6620: 5728: 5712: 5711:
That's it. And another IP has shown up and reverted. I'll start the SPI.
5697: 5690: 4422: 4345: 3411:
Thank you for quality articles about books and related articles, such as
2292: 1524: 1382:
Ok great. Will mark this date as a terminus for the 4 problems listed at
916: 900: 851: 841: 833: 717: 438: 258: 6228:
describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
5253:
possibly revert one problematic type of change while leaving the others.
5152:
so anything editing a reference should be compatible with that fact. --
4652:
parameter. How do you feel about having WaybackMedic fix something like
2274:
regarding an issue with which you may have been involved. Thank you. —
1706:
template on the talk page? In this case I have updated the parameter at
6137: 4078:
Hi again, here is another BOT problem that may have been fixed by now,
3463:
Courtesy Notification: RfC Opened from a Discussion you participated in
3346: 2430: 837: 606: 6562: 2379:
URLs in the help page are correct, so I will undo your edit there. --
828:
regarded Dickens as the best of all English novelists, and considered
473:. This is due to an improper implementation of an agreed-upon Rfc by 328: 6578: 6340: 6191: 5936: 5922: 3245: 2016:
The Wikimedia Foundation Executive Director Search Steering Committee
1751:
OK, thanks. I'll watch out for others that need checking manually. –
1334: 350: 235: 201: 181: 157: 3698:
I actually wrote the piece but do appreciate all your efforts/help.
1994:
2016 Wikimedia Foundation Executive Director Search Community Survey
1063:
searches when I feel it is justifiable, and sometimes miss some. --
613: 6627: 6503: 5264:
I hope these comments will help you to improve your bot. Thanks. --
4004:. Both were (I think) identical copies of already created articles 2760: 1693:; I agree that there is no valid archived link for that citation. 1274: 638: 623: 508: 5616:
Yes, that was I trying to say. Thanks for the help, I ask there.
5021:
Oh I see the other soccerway ref is imported from a template. --
4622:
Oh, I didn't know that. Okay, then let's leave them untouched. --
1596: 1491:
URGENT..._ _ _... morse ...---... ...___… Hi listen your summary
825: 543: 209:
I'll look into it. I know nothing about requirements. Thanks. --
3854:
Heh.. GreenC bot, please don't destroy the world. Thank you. --
6231:
If you wish to participate in the 2016 election, please review
5188:
the form as I mentioned, in the event any bot changes the ref.—
4263:
I had included an archiveurl merely as a defensive practice in
4259:
Wayback Medic 2 adding "dead link" when primary is still active
3470:
I am sending this courtesy notification to let you know that a
3270:
don't have time to write it right now, but I poked around with
3077:
set. The two target refs are the first two in the list-defined
2487:? Is that something your bot can address? If so, very exciting 1436:
and they have their own set of procedures and rules there. --
536: 532: 6458: 4543:, I found a weird looking archive link that may or may not be 3474:
has been opened regarding whether or not to add an Infobox to
1386:(although the 404 problem might continue depending on IA). -- 527:
that back in 1885, Knowledge editors wrote Good Articles with
257:
Hey just a notice that you somehow duplicated the contents of
6465:
An editor has asked for a discussion to address the redirect
5858:
I like to believe that we contributed a tiny little share to
3628: 2291:
a lot of redlinks on the gutenberg list still. Kind regards,
4496:
Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year Award
3772:. A discussion is taking place to see if it abides with the 957:
at any time by removing the {{Talkback}} or {{Tb}} template.
465:
Hi, through no fault of your own, a recent revert I made at
6577:, and thanks for your work to maintain, improve and expand 5668: 5654: 4855:
which added invalid dates including archive dates in 2018.
4753: 3184:$ ./driver -p main -n "User:Czar/drafts/WaybackMedic test" 867:
The story is told almost entirely from the position of the
349:, and thanks for your work to maintain, improve and expand 4579: 2932:
medic.nim(2, 18) Error: undeclared identifier: 'randomize'
2037:
Hi. I'd like to learn how to use WayBack Medic. I've read
877:
and would be influential in the genre such as Dickens own
6498:
Was wondering if you'd kindly be interested in assessing
4294:. However that's wrong it should also check when missing 3838:
OMG, the bot is alive. The end of the world is upon us.—
1510:
Oh yeah sorry about that urgent OCD. Sir I am so sorry.
528: 5235:
Removal of contents with insufficient edit summary, etc.
4286:
check if the URL is working before adding the dead tag (
1164: 6212:
is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
4498:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 4082:
added a leading zero to the date causing a cite error.
2094:
List of things creating Internet Archive search queries
1595:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 1493:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/Positron_emission_tomography
1273:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 714:
list of films in the public domain in the United States
4752:
several hours ago. I'm guessing it was trying to edit
4180:
I have a correction to Helena Bonham Carter's profile.
3506:
Extended (hopefully final) trial approved, please see
6309:.. the first is an IP edit (they forgot to login) -- 4851:
Hi, there appears to be some problem with the BOT in
4749: 4738: 4468:
I copied what was there without paying attention. --
3907:
Sorry, I think I inadvertently stopped your bot with
441:. You may be blocked from editing Knowledge," I only 3765:
Category:International League Hall of Fame inductees
3750:
Category:International League Hall of Fame inductees
2340:
a special case that should have been left alone? --
1696:
Would it be possible for the bot to also update the
6337: 5993: 5072:On the template page, the ref is defined this way: 4888:but this article is a monster (appropriately). -- 2987:It doesn't appear to be a folder permissions issue 483:
Talk:2015_Thalys_train_attack#Implementation_of_Rfc
232:is perhaps a good place to start. Regards — Martin 3278:last night so I might just try that down the line 809: 641:, and thanks for your contributions to Knowledge. 6358:Great, thanks! Look forward to trying it out. -- 6112:Knowledge:Bots/Requests for approval/GreenC bot 3 6106:Knowledge:Bots/Requests for approval/GreenC bot 3 5356:GreenC bot cannot distinguish between links that 4777:That would make sense but it had no trouble with 4490:Disambiguation link notification for September 10 3508:Knowledge:Bots/Requests for approval/GreenC bot 2 3501:Knowledge:Bots/Requests for approval/GreenC bot 2 3478:. The prior discussion has now closed so that a 2462:Knowledge:Bots/Requests for approval/GreenC bot 2 1533:has been reverted. You may want to check it out. 1433: 5220:Thanks for the tip! I'll remember that remplate 3824:Yes, that shouldn't happen will investigate. -- 3195:import urllib, sys; print urllib.quote(sys.argv) 5997:back out again. What do you think of the ToS?— 4598:snapshot date due to citation verification. -- 679:, thank you, North America, Happy New Year! -- 417:Knowledge:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents 6500:Knowledge:Articles_for_deletion/Heap_(company) 6264:Is this account really affiliated with you? -- 5960:}} to user talk pages with a friendly message. 5671:, Techcrunh] , Money saving experts and more. 5280:very difficult to manually check the bot edits 4913:places and formats with each type of page. -- 3921:No problem, I added that message recently. -- 1416:Hello i just joined.How do i upload pictures? 840:read it enthralled in a Siberian prison camp. 579:, hey thanks! Happy New Year. Cool banner. -- 5482:be implemented in mainstream web software...) 5064:2011 League of Ireland Premier Division table 4781:, I'll need to investigate what happened. -- 4230:- it says she played Queen elizabeth, but it 2840:http://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/1317 6082:Discussing streamlining US cannabis articles 4384:Yeah you can actually see the robots.txt on 4226:Correct: the article doesn't say she played 3801:WaybackMedic 2 removing citation line breaks 3768:, which you created, has been nominated for 2690:. Same for another link that was added with 1265:Disambiguation link notification for March 4 637:Have a prosperous, productive and enjoyable 113:Before you use this user right, please read 98:, giving you the ability to create and edit 6473:redirect, you might want to participate in 4756:, and maybe the dollar sign messed it up? — 4640:WBM link in "url" rather than "archive-url" 2609:but apparently not. Oh well, thanks anyway 6469:. Since you had some involvement with the 3546:Hello, there appears to be a problem with 3041:main.meta = /path/WaybackMedic/meta/main/ 3036:main.data = /path/WaybackMedic/data/main/ 1587:Disambiguation link notification for May 4 4801:Maybe the $ sign isn't getting escaped?— 3430:defending the idea of community consensus 3292:https://web.archive.org/save/_embed/$ URL 2467:Your task has been approved for trial. — 2143:Your dead link bot - idea for improvement 1659:Yes bug fixed. thanks for the notice. -- 942:Hello, GreenC. You have new messages at 406:Administrators' noticeboard: red herring 230:Knowledge:Guide to requests for adminship 6619: 5798:. 11 July 2007 produces a red error. -- 5726:Knowledge:Sockpuppet investigations/Dbdb 4238:- i.e., QE2's mum :) Hope tihis helps. 3031:default.meta = /path/WaybackMedic/meta/ 3026:default.data = /path/WaybackMedic/data/ 787:OK. Thanks for your other edit there.  — 178:Have you considered adminship? — Martin 82:" user permission, allowing you to edit 5057:2011 League of Ireland Premier Division 3947:Hi, there appears to be a problem with 3612:is something your bot could do, too? -- 1529:Hi GreenC: A recent edit you performed 1109:I don't know if this can be prevented. 14: 5576:Sorry if my bad grammar confused you. 4960:I don't know what you mean. The given 4744:Just to let you know, GreenC bot made 4336:Hasty deadlink tag from WaybackMedic 2 6198:Hello, Green Cardamom. Voting in the 3996:GreenC bot just created two articles 921:Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man 469:has undone a change of yours made on 6477:if you have not already done so. - 6201:2016 Arbitration Committee elections 6153:User_talk:Xaosflux#Competing_bots.3F 4282:Thanks for the report. The bot will 3627:It looks like IABot has it covered. 1467: 1192:no problem. When using the template 854:paid it relevance through parody in 6172:Sorry about that - clumsy fingers. 388:Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! 94:. It also allows you to bypass the 78:Your account has been granted the " 23: 6591: 6553: 6546: 6539: 6457: 5956:Send Halloween cheer by adding {{ 5910: 5903: 3973:Yeah an old bug. I had fixed cases 3106:./bug -p main -n "article name" -v 3102:./driver -p main -n "article name" 3071:User:Czar/drafts/WaybackMedic test 2957:from math import randomize, random 2904:./driver -p main -n "article name" 2215:template, but it doesn't seem to. 935: 612: 605: 415:There is a response discussion at 363: 319: 312: 305: 154:Happy template editing! — Martin 70: 24: 6653: 5854:HTTPS now 50% of internet traffic 5069:template that the page includes. 3752:has been nominated for discussion 3159:(set "/path" to actual path). -- 2682:. If you're curious, they either 2375:Thank you. That sounds as if the 2272:Knowledge:Bot owners' noticeboard 1902:original URL was supposed to be.— 1881:template ("Cyberbot Ignore"). -- 739:Sorry about the edit conflict on 175:Could you archive your talk page? 6561: 6190: 6086:Your comments appreciated here: 5827: 5639: 5524:Sounds great! Thank you as well. 4672:Seems like a good idea to me. -- 4236:Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother 4146: 3756: 3404: 2790:: all good, I have Nim and gawk 2429: 2265: 2211:instructed the bot to leave the 2121:.. sending reply via email. -- 2039:User:Green Cardamom/WaybackMedic 1468: 1091:Internet Archive author template 660:Send New Year cheer by adding {{ 507: 419:regarding an issue you created. 410: 327: 6502:(since you participated in the 6380:re-adding unsourced information 5696:Shall we start an SPI on this? 5302:Hi, thanks for the quick reply. 5080:Your edit defined it this way: 4737:Serious error by GreenC bot at 3650:Sounds good. Although it seems 601:Happy New Year, Green Cardamom! 5814:13:45, 29 September 2016 (UTC) 5785:13:42, 29 September 2016 (UTC) 5757:23:43, 26 September 2016 (UTC) 5737:23:34, 26 September 2016 (UTC) 5721:23:25, 26 September 2016 (UTC) 5706:23:17, 26 September 2016 (UTC) 5681:21:24, 23 September 2016 (UTC) 5626:09:12, 18 September 2016 (UTC) 5611:12:58, 18 September 2016 (UTC) 5586:01:52, 18 September 2016 (UTC) 5537:15:10, 19 September 2016 (UTC) 5520:12:46, 19 September 2016 (UTC) 5499:10:27, 19 September 2016 (UTC) 5463:21:13, 18 September 2016 (UTC) 5444:14:48, 18 September 2016 (UTC) 5423:14:25, 18 September 2016 (UTC) 5398:13:16, 18 September 2016 (UTC) 5377:11:34, 18 September 2016 (UTC) 5351:22:04, 17 September 2016 (UTC) 5327:14:55, 17 September 2016 (UTC) 5298:11:35, 17 September 2016 (UTC) 5274:10:31, 17 September 2016 (UTC) 5230:14:13, 15 September 2016 (UTC) 5200:13:31, 15 September 2016 (UTC) 5183:13:14, 15 September 2016 (UTC) 5162:11:40, 15 September 2016 (UTC) 5143:01:12, 15 September 2016 (UTC) 5129:<ref name="soccerway"/: --> 5123:15:01, 14 September 2016 (UTC) 5099:14:52, 14 September 2016 (UTC) 5037:14:47, 14 September 2016 (UTC) 5017:14:43, 14 September 2016 (UTC) 4997:14:37, 14 September 2016 (UTC) 4980:14:35, 14 September 2016 (UTC) 4955:14:29, 14 September 2016 (UTC) 4929:16:49, 13 September 2016 (UTC) 4904:13:31, 13 September 2016 (UTC) 4882:11:04, 13 September 2016 (UTC) 4865:10:05, 13 September 2016 (UTC) 4837:13:20, 12 September 2016 (UTC) 4813:13:09, 12 September 2016 (UTC) 4797:12:36, 12 September 2016 (UTC) 4772:11:19, 12 September 2016 (UTC) 4729:23:49, 11 September 2016 (UTC) 4711:20:47, 11 September 2016 (UTC) 4682:19:53, 11 September 2016 (UTC) 4632:19:28, 11 September 2016 (UTC) 4614:15:42, 11 September 2016 (UTC) 4592:14:35, 11 September 2016 (UTC) 4530:10:51, 10 September 2016 (UTC) 3482:can be reached on the matter. 3427:, for your dead-link-bot, for 3349:}}) while signing a reply, thx 3274:and found a basic command for 2334:Help:Using the Wayback Machine 2328:Help:Using the Wayback Machine 1823:Thanks for the explanation. -- 662:subst:Happy New Year fireworks 90:that have been protected with 13: 1: 6588:15:30, 18 December 2016 (UTC) 6529:22:32, 17 December 2016 (UTC) 6489:04:01, 17 December 2016 (UTC) 6443:19:21, 10 December 2016 (UTC) 6374:15:38, 24 November 2016 (UTC) 6353:15:15, 24 November 2016 (UTC) 6325:15:50, 24 November 2016 (UTC) 6300:15:33, 24 November 2016 (UTC) 6276:09:34, 24 November 2016 (UTC) 6251:22:08, 21 November 2016 (UTC) 6214:Knowledge arbitration process 6177:22:06, 16 November 2016 (UTC) 6162:05:50, 14 November 2016 (UTC) 6146:05:48, 14 November 2016 (UTC) 5083:<ref name="soccerway": --> 5075:<ref name="soccerway": --> 4484:01:09, 9 September 2016 (UTC) 4463:01:04, 9 September 2016 (UTC) 4431:23:43, 8 September 2016 (UTC) 4409:23:25, 8 September 2016 (UTC) 4376:23:01, 8 September 2016 (UTC) 4354:22:36, 8 September 2016 (UTC) 4330:00:21, 8 September 2016 (UTC) 4277:20:37, 7 September 2016 (UTC) 4253:13:16, 7 September 2016 (UTC) 4205:13:03, 7 September 2016 (UTC) 4172:11:52, 7 September 2016 (UTC) 4131:10:02, 7 September 2016 (UTC) 4113:19:49, 6 September 2016 (UTC) 4092:18:53, 6 September 2016 (UTC) 4069:05:56, 6 September 2016 (UTC) 4049:15:14, 5 September 2016 (UTC) 4033:07:07, 5 September 2016 (UTC) 4012:. Note the difference is the 3986:22:49, 4 September 2016 (UTC) 3968:21:39, 4 September 2016 (UTC) 3937:18:38, 1 September 2016 (UTC) 3916:05:29, 1 September 2016 (UTC) 3898:18:45, 1 September 2016 (UTC) 3870:18:45, 1 September 2016 (UTC) 3850:01:20, 1 September 2016 (UTC) 3604:Google cache and WaybackMedic 2755:Ok. You will need to install 2688:haven't been archived in 2016 2504:Do you mean case 2 mentioned 2286:Question about Gutenberg list 1257:17:30, 28 February 2016 (UTC) 1234:17:23, 28 February 2016 (UTC) 1218:17:01, 28 February 2016 (UTC) 1180:16:36, 28 February 2016 (UTC) 1155:17:16, 24 February 2016 (UTC) 1141:15:57, 24 February 2016 (UTC) 1119:15:48, 24 February 2016 (UTC) 1079:19:55, 22 February 2016 (UTC) 1042:17:55, 22 February 2016 (UTC) 1030:15:02, 22 February 2016 (UTC) 1006:06:08, 22 February 2016 (UTC) 994:05:56, 22 February 2016 (UTC) 973:04:58, 17 February 2016 (UTC) 951:04:58, 17 February 2016 (UTC) 595:01:39, 31 December 2015 (UTC) 561:22:46, 30 December 2015 (UTC) 495:10:16, 29 December 2015 (UTC) 456:19:27, 27 December 2015 (UTC) 429:19:27, 27 December 2015 (UTC) 401:22:43, 25 December 2015 (UTC) 360:18:34, 20 December 2015 (UTC) 295:14:19, 17 December 2015 (UTC) 272:05:20, 17 December 2015 (UTC) 245:22:43, 16 December 2015 (UTC) 225:14:21, 16 December 2015 (UTC) 191:12:32, 15 December 2015 (UTC) 167:14:40, 14 December 2015 (UTC) 6421:16:15, 7 December 2016 (UTC) 6395:09:03, 7 December 2016 (UTC) 6121:23:22, 8 November 2016 (UTC) 6100:22:25, 8 November 2016 (UTC) 6072:18:14, 7 November 2016 (UTC) 6055:15:07, 7 November 2016 (UTC) 6031:14:56, 7 November 2016 (UTC) 6009:02:56, 7 November 2016 (UTC) 5983:15:21, 3 November 2016 (UTC) 5949:23:56, 31 October 2016 (UTC) 5893:15:42, 17 October 2016 (UTC) 5872:01:30, 17 October 2016 (UTC) 5085:| deadurl= no}}</ref: --> 5077:| deadurl= no}}</ref: --> 3136:Hm... still not getting it. 2902:to initiate a project. Then 2194:Edits claiming "not dead"... 1434:http://commons.wikipedia.org 800:15:12, 23 January 2016 (UTC) 783:14:49, 23 January 2016 (UTC) 760:14:33, 23 January 2016 (UTC) 730:22:11, 17 January 2016 (UTC) 143:All template-protected pages 7: 6639:01:42, 1 January 2017 (UTC) 6604:Spread the WikiLove; use {{ 6235:and submit your choices on 5846:21:57, 2 October 2016 (UTC) 4535:Weird Internet Archive link 3834:23:24, 31 August 2016 (UTC) 3819:19:58, 31 August 2016 (UTC) 3796:00:37, 29 August 2016 (UTC) 3744:16:59, 28 August 2016 (UTC) 3729:04:38, 27 August 2016 (UTC) 3708:04:25, 27 August 2016 (UTC) 3684:17:33, 23 August 2016 (UTC) 3664:17:15, 23 August 2016 (UTC) 3646:14:53, 22 August 2016 (UTC) 3622:14:19, 22 August 2016 (UTC) 3596:11:11, 20 August 2016 (UTC) 3582:01:48, 20 August 2016 (UTC) 3561:23:35, 19 August 2016 (UTC) 3537:02:43, 27 August 2016 (UTC) 3517:15:07, 18 August 2016 (UTC) 3495:19:25, 15 August 2016 (UTC) 3421:A Visit from the Goon Squad 1849:) 23:48, 27 May 2016 (UTC) 1775:Cucuteni-Trypillian culture 1681:WaybackMedic and talk pages 822:being the mid-point novel. 745:Lemelson Capital Management 695:16:08, 2 January 2016 (UTC) 648:00:55, 2 January 2016 (UTC) 437:before you revert again at 10: 6658: 6243:MediaWiki message delivery 6233:the candidates' statements 5972:Your BRFA task #3 as been 5790:See the documentation for 5360:come back and those which 4648:parameter rather than the 3458:06:34, 4 August 2016 (UTC) 3417:Best Translated Book Award 2020:MediaWiki message delivery 1593:Best Translated Book Award 1487:14:57, 29 March 2016 (UTC) 1452:16:17, 24 March 2016 (UTC) 1426:16:09, 24 March 2016 (UTC) 1145:Ok, thanks; I understand. 433:As for your comment, "See 6606:subst:Season's Greetings1 5877:Yes undoubtedly true. -- 5826: 5638: 4817:Yeah that's the problem. 4152: 4145: 3784:categories for discussion 3386:00:39, 22 July 2016 (UTC) 3352:19:42, 21 July 2016 (UTC) 3327:I can't say I agree with 3311:19:23, 10 July 2016 (UTC) 3264:18:02, 10 July 2016 (UTC) 3229:04:15, 10 July 2016 (UTC) 3208:03:17, 10 July 2016 (UTC) 3175:02:48, 10 July 2016 (UTC) 3150:02:31, 10 July 2016 (UTC) 3132:01:46, 10 July 2016 (UTC) 3095:00:38, 10 July 2016 (UTC) 2618:23:56, 28 June 2016 (UTC) 2602:23:06, 28 June 2016 (UTC) 2571:22:55, 28 June 2016 (UTC) 2551:21:51, 28 June 2016 (UTC) 2532:21:46, 28 June 2016 (UTC) 2512:or case 2 mentioned here 2496:21:35, 28 June 2016 (UTC) 2474:03:26, 25 June 2016 (UTC) 2453:23:35, 15 June 2016 (UTC) 2437:The Barnstar of Diplomacy 2428: 2412:20:11, 14 June 2016 (UTC) 2389:19:50, 14 June 2016 (UTC) 2371:19:46, 14 June 2016 (UTC) 2350:19:16, 14 June 2016 (UTC) 1579:14:00, 1 April 2016 (UTC) 1568:13:24, 1 April 2016 (UTC) 1540:03:34, 1 April 2016 (UTC) 1520:09:43, 21 June 2016 (UTC) 1506:09:42, 21 June 2016 (UTC) 1402:17:06, 9 March 2016 (UTC) 1378:16:28, 9 March 2016 (UTC) 1361:01:47, 9 March 2016 (UTC) 1327:16:25, 8 March 2016 (UTC) 1305:11:31, 4 March 2016 (UTC) 944:Cyberpower678's talk page 506: 446:good, scholarly edit be. 116:Knowledge:Template editor 6453:Redirects for discussion 4984:Here's another example. 4265:Desert Rose (Sting song) 3064:23:53, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2996:23:32, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2979:22:57, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2951:21:52, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2922:21:40, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2889:20:50, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2863:19:55, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2824:19:18, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2799:18:30, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2779:13:22, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2751:06:08, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2737:02:01, 9 July 2016 (UTC) 2712:20:28, 8 July 2016 (UTC) 2657:19:35, 8 July 2016 (UTC) 2631:19:03, 8 July 2016 (UTC) 2322:12:13, 8 June 2016 (UTC) 2301:09:46, 8 June 2016 (UTC) 2281:10:57, 7 June 2016 (UTC) 2253:04:06, 7 June 2016 (UTC) 2225:03:59, 7 June 2016 (UTC) 2188:14:01, 5 June 2016 (UTC) 2162:08:46, 5 June 2016 (UTC) 2137:01:29, 5 June 2016 (UTC) 2109:00:20, 5 June 2016 (UTC) 2086:13:53, 4 June 2016 (UTC) 2072:13:50, 4 June 2016 (UTC) 2051:13:44, 4 June 2016 (UTC) 2028:21:48, 1 June 2016 (UTC) 1978:23:57, 28 May 2016 (UTC) 1960:07:53, 28 May 2016 (UTC) 1939:02:03, 28 May 2016 (UTC) 1914:01:42, 28 May 2016 (UTC) 1897:00:31, 28 May 2016 (UTC) 1859:23:48, 27 May 2016 (UTC) 1828:16:41, 30 May 2016 (UTC) 1815:21:30, 27 May 2016 (UTC) 1786:20:59, 27 May 2016 (UTC) 1766:11:20, 28 May 2016 (UTC) 1747:17:27, 27 May 2016 (UTC) 1725:13:08, 27 May 2016 (UTC) 1675:17:04, 27 May 2016 (UTC) 1654:12:12, 27 May 2016 (UTC) 1572:You're welcome? Cheers! 1462:Hi. Will you please use 481:For details, please see 467:2015 Thalys train attack 461:2015 Thalys train attack 378:subst:Season's Greetings 6608:}} to send this message 6475:the redirect discussion 6429:At what point will the 6092:Goonsquad LCpl Mulvaney 4937:Bot breaking references 4573:currently 300 links to 2008:, (hosted by Qualtrics) 1627:10:45, 4 May 2016 (UTC) 1104:Internet Archive author 1052:Internet Archive author 747:for a while instead.  — 708:Thank you for removing 380:}} to send this message 125:criteria for revocation 6644: 6596: 6558: 6551: 6544: 6462: 5915: 5908: 5593:Knowledge:Bot requests 5055:In the version of the 4575:wayback.archive-it.org 2940:nimble install extmath 1012:("1840-1914" AND Ives) 940: 869:first person narrative 664:}} to user talk pages. 617: 610: 368: 324: 317: 310: 75: 6623: 6595: 6569:Hello Green Cardamom: 6557: 6550: 6543: 6461: 6210:Arbitration Committee 6183:ArbCom Elections 2016 6114:has been approved. — 5958:subst:Happy Halloween 5933:Hello Green Cardamom: 5914: 5907: 5835:The Original Barnstar 5777:The joy of all things 5775:changed it. Regards. 5771:Hi. This is the diff 5647:The Original Barnstar 5565:Article title changes 4010:Green Line "D" Branch 4006:Green Line "A" Branch 4002:Green Line A Branch D 3992:Problem with your bot 3425:the rescue of content 3189:File "<string: --> 2684:haven't been archived 1642:Reading Half Marathon 1634:Reading Half Marathon 1097:James Eustace Bagnall 939: 850:a "sheer imitation". 844:called his last book 616: 609: 367: 335:Hello Green Cardamom: 323: 316: 309: 121:wise template editing 74: 58:2017 Talk Page <-- 6259:User:Sureshnathanael 5591:you might ask it at 5569:Hi Green Cardamom! 4518:opt-out instructions 3779:the category's entry 3011:./project -c -p main 2900:./project -c -p main 2508:or case 2 mentioned 1708:Talk:Tomb of Absalom 1615:opt-out instructions 1293:opt-out instructions 897:The Way of All Flesh 722:Hitcher vs. Candyman 701:Public domain movies 516:Happy New Year 2016! 129:secure your password 6451:Vine.com listed at 6405:is still live. -- 5820:A barnstar for you! 5632:A barnstar for you! 5239:Hi Green Cardamom, 4819:Quiz $ Millionaire 4779:Quiz $ Millionaire 4156:The Wikignome Award 4074:Another BOT problem 3998:Green Line A Branch 3472:Request for Comment 2806:download *.nim here 2422:A barnstar for you! 301:Season's Greetings! 172:Just wondering ... 92:template protection 6645: 6641: 6597: 6559: 6552: 6545: 6535:Season's Greetings 6463: 6346:Happy Thanksgiving 6226:arbitration policy 6185:: Voting now open! 6060:has been updated.— 5994:This will take you 5974:approved for trial 5916: 5909: 5673:Eddard 'Ned' Stark 4541:James L. McPherson 4508:• Join us at the 4228:Queen Elizabeth II 3652:InternetArchiveBot 3441:awesome Wikipedian 3413:Daniyal Mueenuddin 3021:default.id = main 1918:This is true, the 1605:• Join us at the 1418:EnchantingZucchini 1283:• Join us at the 955:remove this notice 941: 880:Great Expectations 814:Dickens worked on 618: 611: 565: 518: 369: 325: 318: 311: 76: 6624: 6531: 6485: 6351: 6070: 6007: 5988:Interface Project 5961: 5851: 5850: 5687: 5686: 5618:TheAmazingPeanuts 5578:TheAmazingPeanuts 5461: 5349: 5334:talk page stalker 5198: 5141: 4880: 4811: 4513: 4455:Trappist the monk 4314:for accuracy. -- 4290:). Determined by 4218: 4215:talk page watcher 4208: 4191:comment added by 4177: 4176: 4139:For Wayback Medic 3848: 3399:green books award 3350: 3329:this edit summary 3073:with and without 2896:rest of the files 2801: 2761:these instruction 2677:Nadia Kaabi-Linke 2458: 2457: 1912: 1610: 1376: 1325: 1288: 971: 816:David Copperfield 797: 792: 757: 752: 741:Emmanuel Lemelson 569: 568: 523: 514: 478:the Rfc first. 475:Tough sailor ouch 243: 189: 165: 6649: 6637: 6609: 6586: 6565: 6522: 6494:Deletion inquiry 6483: 6431:Streisand effect 6418: 6411: 6371: 6364: 6347: 6342: 6322: 6315: 6304:Perhaps related. 6297: 6290: 6273: 6268: 6194: 6159: 6118: 6066: 6061: 6052: 6045: 6028: 6021: 6003: 5998: 5980: 5955: 5947: 5926: 5899:Halloween cheer! 5890: 5883: 5831: 5824: 5823: 5811: 5804: 5797: 5754: 5747: 5643: 5636: 5635: 5608: 5601: 5517: 5510: 5457: 5452: 5441: 5434: 5395: 5388: 5345: 5340: 5337: 5295: 5288: 5281: 5194: 5189: 5180: 5173: 5137: 5132: 5130: 5120: 5113: 5068: 5062: 5050:Help:Cite errors 5034: 5027: 5014: 5007: 4977: 4970: 4926: 4919: 4901: 4894: 4876: 4871: 4834: 4827: 4807: 4802: 4794: 4787: 4708: 4701: 4694: 4690: 4668: 4658: 4651: 4647: 4611: 4604: 4567: 4555: 4545:Internet Archive 4503: 4481: 4474: 4449: 4406: 4399: 4373: 4366: 4340:I just reverted 4327: 4320: 4313: 4305: 4301: 4298:. If there is a 4297: 4293: 4225: 4212: 4207: 4185: 4150: 4143: 4142: 4110: 4103: 3958: 3943:BOT date problem 3934: 3927: 3895: 3888: 3882:, bug fixed. -- 3867: 3860: 3844: 3839: 3788:RevelationDirect 3786:page. Thank you. 3760: 3759: 3726: 3719: 3681: 3674: 3643: 3636: 3579: 3572: 3534: 3514: 3491: 3438: 3433:and living with 3432: 3408: 3383: 3376: 3369: 3340: 3308: 3301: 3294: 3285: 3283: 3272:the basic IA API 3261: 3254: 3226: 3219: 3206: 3204: 3196: 3191: 3185: 3172: 3165: 3158: 3148: 3146: 3129: 3122: 3115: 3111: 3107: 3103: 3093: 3091: 3086: 3080: 3076: 3061: 3054: 3042: 3037: 3032: 3027: 3022: 3017: 3012: 2994: 2992: 2986: 2976: 2969: 2962: 2958: 2949: 2947: 2942:didn't solve it 2941: 2937: 2933: 2929: 2919: 2912: 2905: 2901: 2887: 2885: 2878: 2872: 2860: 2853: 2821: 2814: 2797: 2795: 2789: 2783: 2776: 2769: 2749: 2747: 2734: 2727: 2710: 2708: 2699: 2693: 2654: 2647: 2629: 2627: 2616: 2614: 2599: 2592: 2584: 2578: 2568: 2561: 2549: 2547: 2540: 2529: 2522: 2494: 2492: 2471: 2433: 2426: 2425: 2409: 2402: 2378: 2368: 2361: 2339: 2319: 2312: 2278: 2269: 2268: 2250: 2243: 2185: 2178: 2150:Cesar Department 2134: 2127: 2120: 2076:OK, makes sense. 2069: 2062: 1949: 1936: 1929: 1921: 1908: 1903: 1894: 1887: 1880: 1874: 1870: 1812: 1805: 1797: 1759: 1744: 1737: 1718: 1705: 1699: 1672: 1665: 1600: 1577: 1565: 1558: 1551: 1548:Northamerica1000 1538: 1473: 1472: 1471: 1449: 1442: 1399: 1392: 1372: 1367: 1358: 1351: 1338: 1321: 1316: 1278: 1254: 1247: 1215: 1208: 1201: 1195: 1191: 1138: 1131: 1108: 1102: 1076: 1069: 1056: 1050: 1040: 1027: 1020: 1013: 1004: 992: 967: 962: 958: 889:Jude the Obscure 795: 790: 780: 773: 755: 750: 692: 685: 678: 675:Northamerica1000 665: 646: 629: 592: 585: 578: 558: 556:Let's discuss it 525:Did you know ... 511: 504: 503: 414: 413: 381: 358: 331: 292: 285: 253:Possible AWB Bug 233: 222: 215: 205: 179: 155: 145: 81: 67:Template editing 62: 61: 60: 49: 48: 47: 35: 34: 33: 18:User talk:GreenC 6657: 6656: 6652: 6651: 6650: 6648: 6647: 6646: 6633: 6618: 6611: 6603: 6598: 6582: 6566: 6537: 6496: 6482: 6456: 6414: 6407: 6382: 6367: 6360: 6350: 6345: 6335: 6333:IABot Interface 6318: 6311: 6293: 6286: 6271: 6266: 6262: 6255: 6254: 6238:the voting page 6195: 6187: 6170: 6157: 6128: 6116: 6109: 6084: 6069: 6068::Limited Access 6064: 6048: 6041: 6024: 6017: 6006: 6001: 5990: 5978: 5970: 5963: 5962: 5943: 5929: 5920: 5901: 5886: 5879: 5856: 5822: 5807: 5800: 5791: 5769: 5750: 5743: 5694: 5657:Knowledge page 5634: 5604: 5597: 5567: 5513: 5506: 5471:consent of the 5460: 5459::Limited Access 5455: 5437: 5430: 5391: 5384: 5348: 5343: 5331: 5291: 5284: 5279: 5237: 5218: 5197: 5192: 5176: 5169: 5140: 5135: 5128: 5116: 5109: 5086: 5078: 5066: 5060: 5030: 5023: 5010: 5003: 4973: 4966: 4939: 4922: 4915: 4897: 4890: 4879: 4874: 4849: 4830: 4823: 4810: 4805: 4790: 4783: 4746:a serious error 4742: 4704: 4697: 4692: 4688: 4666: 4656: 4649: 4645: 4642: 4607: 4600: 4563: 4551: 4537: 4510:DPL WikiProject 4492: 4477: 4470: 4445: 4443: 4402: 4395: 4369: 4362: 4338: 4323: 4316: 4307: 4303: 4299: 4295: 4291: 4261: 4244: 4219: 4186: 4182: 4141: 4106: 4099: 4076: 4057: 3994: 3956: 3945: 3930: 3923: 3905: 3891: 3884: 3863: 3856: 3847: 3842: 3803: 3761: 3757: 3754: 3722: 3715: 3696: 3677: 3670: 3654:is inactive. -- 3639: 3632: 3606: 3575: 3568: 3566:It's fixed. -- 3544: 3532: 3524: 3512: 3510:for details. — 3504: 3489: 3465: 3446: 3445: 3439:, - you are an 3434: 3428: 3409: 3394: 3379: 3372: 3363: 3321: 3304: 3297: 3290: 3281: 3279: 3257: 3250: 3222: 3215: 3202: 3200: 3194: 3188: 3183: 3168: 3161: 3156: 3144: 3142: 3125: 3118: 3113: 3109: 3105: 3101: 3089: 3087: 3084: 3078: 3074: 3057: 3050: 3040: 3035: 3030: 3025: 3020: 3016: 3010: 2990: 2988: 2984: 2972: 2965: 2960: 2956: 2945: 2943: 2939: 2935: 2931: 2928:nim c medic.nim 2927: 2915: 2908: 2903: 2899: 2883: 2881: 2876: 2870: 2856: 2849: 2817: 2810: 2793: 2791: 2784: 2772: 2765: 2745: 2743: 2730: 2723: 2706: 2704: 2697: 2691: 2650: 2643: 2625: 2623: 2612: 2610: 2595: 2588: 2582: 2576: 2564: 2557: 2545: 2543: 2538: 2525: 2518: 2490: 2488: 2469: 2465: 2445:Publican Farmer 2424: 2405: 2398: 2394:John of Reading 2381:John of Reading 2376: 2364: 2357: 2342:John of Reading 2337: 2330: 2315: 2308: 2288: 2276: 2266: 2263: 2246: 2239: 2196: 2181: 2174: 2145: 2130: 2123: 2114: 2096: 2065: 2058: 2035: 1996: 1943: 1932: 1925: 1919: 1911: 1906: 1890: 1883: 1878: 1872: 1864: 1838: 1808: 1801: 1791: 1779: 1757: 1740: 1733: 1716: 1703: 1697: 1691:Tomb of Absalom 1683: 1668: 1661: 1638: 1636:by WaybackMedic 1607:DPL WikiProject 1589: 1573: 1561: 1554: 1545: 1534: 1527: 1469: 1460: 1445: 1438: 1414: 1395: 1388: 1375: 1374::Limited Access 1370: 1354: 1347: 1332: 1324: 1323::Limited Access 1319: 1312: 1285:DPL WikiProject 1267: 1250: 1243: 1211: 1204: 1199: 1193: 1185: 1168: 1134: 1127: 1106: 1100: 1093: 1072: 1065: 1054: 1048: 1036: 1023: 1016: 1011: 1000: 988: 984:Brayton C. Ives 980: 970: 965: 959: 948: 933: 913:Sons and Lovers 812: 776: 769: 737: 703: 688: 681: 672: 667: 659: 654: 642: 630: 620: 603: 588: 581: 572: 554: 502: 463: 411: 408: 390: 383: 375: 370: 354: 346:winter solstice 332: 303: 288: 281: 255: 218: 211: 199: 141: 96:title blacklist 80:template editor 79: 69: 63: 56: 55: 54: 50: 42: 41: 40: 36: 29: 28: 27: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 6655: 6632: 6617: 6614: 6613: 6612: 6601: 6574:holiday season 6560: 6538: 6536: 6533: 6527:comment added 6495: 6492: 6480: 6455: 6449: 6448: 6447: 6446: 6445: 6424: 6423: 6381: 6378: 6377: 6376: 6343: 6334: 6331: 6330: 6329: 6328: 6327: 6282:User:Versageek 6261: 6256: 6196: 6189: 6188: 6186: 6180: 6169: 6166: 6165: 6164: 6127: 6124: 6108: 6103: 6083: 6080: 6079: 6078: 6077: 6076: 6075: 6074: 6062: 6034: 6033: 5999: 5989: 5986: 5969: 5964: 5954: 5953: 5952: 5941: 5934: 5930: 5917: 5902: 5900: 5897: 5896: 5895: 5855: 5852: 5849: 5848: 5838: 5837: 5832: 5821: 5818: 5817: 5816: 5768: 5765: 5764: 5763: 5762: 5761: 5760: 5759: 5693: 5688: 5685: 5684: 5650: 5649: 5644: 5633: 5630: 5629: 5628: 5566: 5563: 5562: 5561: 5560: 5559: 5558: 5557: 5556: 5555: 5554: 5553: 5552: 5551: 5550: 5549: 5548: 5547: 5546: 5545: 5544: 5543: 5542: 5541: 5540: 5539: 5525: 5487: 5483: 5479: 5476: 5468: 5453: 5411: 5407: 5403: 5365: 5341: 5315: 5311: 5307: 5303: 5262: 5261: 5258: 5254: 5250: 5236: 5233: 5217: 5214: 5213: 5212: 5211: 5210: 5209: 5208: 5207: 5206: 5205: 5204: 5203: 5202: 5190: 5133: 5082: 5074: 5044: 5043: 5042: 5041: 5040: 5039: 5019: 4938: 4935: 4933: 4885: 4884: 4872: 4848: 4845: 4844: 4843: 4842: 4841: 4840: 4839: 4803: 4741: 4735: 4734: 4733: 4732: 4731: 4714: 4713: 4670: 4669: 4660: 4659: 4641: 4638: 4637: 4636: 4635: 4634: 4617: 4616: 4580:archive-it.org 4576: 4569: 4568: 4557: 4556: 4536: 4533: 4491: 4488: 4487: 4486: 4442: 4439: 4438: 4437: 4436: 4435: 4434: 4433: 4414: 4413: 4412: 4411: 4379: 4378: 4337: 4334: 4333: 4332: 4260: 4257: 4256: 4255: 4240: 4181: 4178: 4175: 4174: 4159: 4158: 4153: 4151: 4140: 4137: 4136: 4135: 4134: 4133: 4116: 4115: 4075: 4072: 4056: 4055:Walter o Brien 4053: 4052: 4051: 3993: 3990: 3989: 3988: 3944: 3941: 3940: 3939: 3904: 3901: 3877: 3876: 3875: 3874: 3873: 3872: 3840: 3802: 3799: 3774:categorization 3755: 3753: 3747: 3732: 3731: 3695: 3692: 3691: 3690: 3689: 3688: 3687: 3686: 3608:I wondered if 3605: 3602: 3601: 3600: 3599: 3598: 3543: 3540: 3523: 3520: 3503: 3498: 3485:Thank you, -- 3464: 3461: 3403: 3401: 3396: 3395: 3393: 3390: 3389: 3388: 3320: 3317: 3316: 3315: 3314: 3313: 3244: 3242: 3241: 3240: 3239: 3238: 3237: 3236: 3235: 3234: 3233: 3232: 3231: 3197: 3192: 3186: 3181: 3009:Ahh, skip the 3007: 3006: 3005: 3004: 3003: 3002: 3001: 3000: 2999: 2998: 2938:installed and 2835: 2834: 2833: 2832: 2831: 2830: 2829: 2828: 2827: 2826: 2787:Green Cardamom 2719: 2672: 2671: 2670: 2669: 2668: 2667: 2666: 2665: 2664: 2663: 2662: 2661: 2660: 2659: 2573: 2499: 2498: 2464: 2459: 2456: 2455: 2440: 2439: 2434: 2423: 2420: 2419: 2418: 2417: 2416: 2415: 2414: 2329: 2326: 2325: 2324: 2287: 2284: 2262: 2257: 2256: 2255: 2195: 2192: 2191: 2190: 2144: 2141: 2140: 2139: 2095: 2092: 2091: 2090: 2089: 2088: 2034: 2031: 2012: 2011: 2010: 2009: 1995: 1992: 1991: 1990: 1989: 1988: 1987: 1986: 1985: 1984: 1983: 1982: 1981: 1980: 1904: 1837: 1834: 1833: 1832: 1831: 1830: 1818: 1817: 1778: 1772: 1771: 1770: 1769: 1768: 1685:Thank you for 1682: 1679: 1678: 1677: 1637: 1630: 1588: 1585: 1584: 1583: 1582: 1581: 1526: 1523: 1512:SubtleAlpha246 1498:SubtleAlpha246 1464:edit summaries 1459: 1458:Edit summaries 1456: 1455: 1454: 1413: 1410: 1409: 1408: 1407: 1406: 1405: 1404: 1368: 1317: 1311: 1308: 1266: 1263: 1262: 1261: 1260: 1259: 1221: 1220: 1167: 1165:Croses Criquet 1161: 1160: 1159: 1158: 1157: 1092: 1089: 1088: 1087: 1086: 1085: 1084: 1083: 1082: 1081: 979: 976: 963: 949:Message added 947: 934: 932: 929: 909:D. H. Lawrence 862:Virginia Woolf 811: 808: 807: 806: 805: 804: 803: 802: 736: 733: 702: 699: 698: 697: 669: 668: 657: 652: 651: 650: 636: 633:Green Cardamom 624:Happy New Year 619: 604: 602: 599: 598: 597: 567: 566: 547: 540: 520: 519: 512: 501: 498: 462: 459: 407: 404: 389: 386: 385: 384: 373: 340:holiday season 326: 304: 302: 299: 298: 297: 254: 251: 250: 249: 248: 247: 207: 196: 195: 194: 193: 176: 152: 151: 146: 137:Useful links: 68: 65: 53: 45:2015 Talk Page 39: 31:Talk Page 2016 26: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 6654: 6643: 6640: 6636: 6635:North America 6631: 6629: 6622: 6610: 6607: 6600: 6599: 6594: 6590: 6589: 6585: 6584:North America 6580: 6576: 6575: 6570: 6564: 6556: 6549: 6542: 6532: 6530: 6526: 6521: 6517: 6513: 6509: 6505: 6501: 6491: 6490: 6487: 6486: 6476: 6472: 6468: 6460: 6454: 6444: 6440: 6436: 6432: 6428: 6427: 6426: 6425: 6422: 6419: 6417: 6412: 6410: 6404: 6399: 6398: 6397: 6396: 6392: 6388: 6375: 6372: 6370: 6365: 6363: 6357: 6356: 6355: 6354: 6348: 6341: 6338: 6326: 6323: 6321: 6316: 6314: 6308: 6306: 6303: 6302: 6301: 6298: 6296: 6291: 6289: 6284:, no sir! -- 6283: 6280: 6279: 6278: 6277: 6274: 6269: 6260: 6253: 6252: 6248: 6244: 6240: 6239: 6234: 6229: 6227: 6223: 6219: 6215: 6211: 6206: 6203: 6202: 6193: 6184: 6179: 6178: 6175: 6163: 6160: 6154: 6150: 6149: 6148: 6147: 6143: 6139: 6136: 6133: 6123: 6122: 6119: 6113: 6107: 6102: 6101: 6097: 6093: 6089: 6073: 6067: 6058: 6057: 6056: 6053: 6051: 6046: 6044: 6038: 6037: 6036: 6035: 6032: 6029: 6027: 6022: 6020: 6013: 6012: 6011: 6010: 6004: 5995: 5985: 5984: 5981: 5975: 5968: 5959: 5951: 5950: 5946: 5945:North America 5940: 5938: 5928: 5927: 5924: 5913: 5906: 5894: 5891: 5889: 5884: 5882: 5876: 5875: 5874: 5873: 5869: 5865: 5861: 5847: 5844: 5843:–– ljhenshall 5840: 5839: 5836: 5833: 5830: 5825: 5815: 5812: 5810: 5805: 5803: 5795: 5789: 5788: 5787: 5786: 5782: 5778: 5773: 5758: 5755: 5753: 5748: 5746: 5740: 5739: 5738: 5734: 5730: 5727: 5724: 5723: 5722: 5718: 5714: 5710: 5709: 5708: 5707: 5703: 5699: 5692: 5683: 5682: 5678: 5674: 5670: 5666: 5662: 5656: 5652: 5651: 5648: 5645: 5642: 5637: 5627: 5623: 5619: 5615: 5614: 5613: 5612: 5609: 5607: 5602: 5600: 5594: 5588: 5587: 5583: 5579: 5574: 5570: 5538: 5534: 5530: 5526: 5523: 5522: 5521: 5518: 5516: 5511: 5509: 5502: 5501: 5500: 5496: 5492: 5488: 5484: 5480: 5477: 5475:right holder. 5474: 5469: 5466: 5465: 5464: 5458: 5449: 5448: 5447: 5446: 5445: 5442: 5440: 5435: 5433: 5426: 5425: 5424: 5420: 5416: 5412: 5408: 5404: 5401: 5400: 5399: 5396: 5394: 5389: 5387: 5380: 5379: 5378: 5374: 5370: 5366: 5363: 5359: 5354: 5353: 5352: 5346: 5335: 5330: 5329: 5328: 5324: 5320: 5316: 5312: 5308: 5304: 5301: 5300: 5299: 5296: 5294: 5289: 5287: 5278: 5277: 5276: 5275: 5271: 5267: 5259: 5255: 5251: 5248: 5247: 5246: 5244: 5240: 5232: 5231: 5227: 5223: 5201: 5195: 5186: 5185: 5184: 5181: 5179: 5174: 5172: 5165: 5164: 5163: 5159: 5155: 5150: 5146: 5145: 5144: 5138: 5126: 5125: 5124: 5121: 5119: 5114: 5112: 5105: 5104: 5103: 5102: 5101: 5100: 5096: 5092: 5081: 5073: 5070: 5065: 5058: 5053: 5051: 5038: 5035: 5033: 5028: 5026: 5020: 5018: 5015: 5013: 5008: 5006: 5000: 4999: 4998: 4994: 4990: 4986: 4983: 4982: 4981: 4978: 4976: 4971: 4969: 4964:looks OK. -- 4963: 4959: 4958: 4957: 4956: 4952: 4948: 4944: 4934: 4931: 4930: 4927: 4925: 4920: 4918: 4911: 4906: 4905: 4902: 4900: 4895: 4893: 4883: 4877: 4869: 4868: 4867: 4866: 4862: 4858: 4854: 4838: 4835: 4833: 4828: 4826: 4820: 4816: 4815: 4814: 4808: 4800: 4799: 4798: 4795: 4793: 4788: 4786: 4780: 4776: 4775: 4774: 4773: 4769: 4766: 4763: 4759: 4755: 4751: 4747: 4740: 4730: 4726: 4722: 4718: 4717: 4716: 4715: 4712: 4709: 4707: 4702: 4700: 4691:converted to 4686: 4685: 4684: 4683: 4679: 4675: 4665: 4664: 4663: 4655: 4654: 4653: 4633: 4629: 4625: 4621: 4620: 4619: 4618: 4615: 4612: 4610: 4605: 4603: 4596: 4595: 4594: 4593: 4589: 4585: 4581: 4577: 4574: 4566: 4562: 4561: 4560: 4554: 4550: 4549: 4548: 4546: 4542: 4532: 4531: 4527: 4523: 4519: 4514: 4511: 4507: 4501: 4497: 4485: 4482: 4480: 4475: 4473: 4467: 4466: 4465: 4464: 4460: 4456: 4451: 4448: 4432: 4428: 4424: 4420: 4419: 4418: 4417: 4416: 4415: 4410: 4407: 4405: 4400: 4398: 4391: 4387: 4383: 4382: 4381: 4380: 4377: 4374: 4372: 4367: 4365: 4358: 4357: 4356: 4355: 4351: 4347: 4343: 4331: 4328: 4326: 4321: 4319: 4311: 4289: 4285: 4281: 4280: 4279: 4278: 4274: 4270: 4266: 4254: 4251: 4250: 4249: 4245: 4243: 4237: 4233: 4229: 4223: 4216: 4211: 4210: 4209: 4206: 4202: 4198: 4194: 4190: 4173: 4169: 4165: 4161: 4160: 4157: 4154: 4149: 4144: 4132: 4128: 4124: 4120: 4119: 4118: 4117: 4114: 4111: 4109: 4104: 4102: 4096: 4095: 4094: 4093: 4089: 4085: 4081: 4071: 4070: 4066: 4062: 4050: 4046: 4042: 4037: 4036: 4035: 4034: 4031: 4030: 4026: 4025: 4024: 4021: 4015: 4011: 4007: 4003: 3999: 3987: 3983: 3979: 3975: 3972: 3971: 3970: 3969: 3965: 3961: 3957:|archivedate= 3954: 3950: 3938: 3935: 3933: 3928: 3926: 3920: 3919: 3918: 3917: 3914: 3910: 3900: 3899: 3896: 3894: 3889: 3887: 3881: 3871: 3868: 3866: 3861: 3859: 3853: 3852: 3851: 3845: 3837: 3836: 3835: 3831: 3827: 3823: 3822: 3821: 3820: 3816: 3812: 3808: 3798: 3797: 3793: 3789: 3785: 3781: 3780: 3775: 3771: 3767: 3766: 3751: 3746: 3745: 3741: 3737: 3730: 3727: 3725: 3720: 3718: 3712: 3711: 3710: 3709: 3705: 3701: 3685: 3682: 3680: 3675: 3673: 3667: 3666: 3665: 3661: 3657: 3653: 3649: 3648: 3647: 3644: 3642: 3637: 3635: 3629: 3626: 3625: 3624: 3623: 3619: 3615: 3611: 3597: 3593: 3589: 3585: 3584: 3583: 3580: 3578: 3573: 3571: 3565: 3564: 3563: 3562: 3558: 3554: 3549: 3548:this BOT edit 3539: 3538: 3535: 3529: 3522:Task approved 3519: 3518: 3515: 3509: 3502: 3497: 3496: 3493: 3492: 3483: 3481: 3477: 3473: 3468: 3460: 3459: 3455: 3451: 3444: 3442: 3437: 3431: 3426: 3422: 3418: 3414: 3407: 3402: 3400: 3387: 3384: 3382: 3377: 3375: 3367: 3361: 3356: 3355: 3354: 3353: 3348: 3344: 3338: 3334: 3330: 3326: 3312: 3309: 3307: 3302: 3300: 3293: 3287: 3286: 3284: 3277: 3273: 3268: 3267: 3266: 3265: 3262: 3260: 3255: 3253: 3247: 3230: 3227: 3225: 3220: 3218: 3211: 3210: 3209: 3205: 3198: 3193: 3187: 3182: 3178: 3177: 3176: 3173: 3171: 3166: 3164: 3153: 3152: 3151: 3147: 3139: 3135: 3134: 3133: 3130: 3128: 3123: 3121: 3098: 3097: 3096: 3092: 3083: 3072: 3068: 3067: 3066: 3065: 3062: 3060: 3055: 3053: 3046: 3043: 3038: 3033: 3028: 3023: 3018: 3014: 2997: 2993: 2982: 2981: 2980: 2977: 2975: 2970: 2968: 2961:import random 2954: 2953: 2952: 2948: 2925: 2924: 2923: 2920: 2918: 2913: 2911: 2897: 2892: 2891: 2890: 2886: 2875: 2867: 2866: 2865: 2864: 2861: 2859: 2854: 2852: 2845: 2841: 2825: 2822: 2820: 2815: 2813: 2807: 2803: 2802: 2800: 2796: 2788: 2782: 2781: 2780: 2777: 2775: 2770: 2768: 2762: 2758: 2754: 2753: 2752: 2748: 2740: 2739: 2738: 2735: 2733: 2728: 2726: 2720: 2716: 2715: 2714: 2713: 2709: 2702: 2696: 2689: 2685: 2681: 2678: 2658: 2655: 2653: 2648: 2646: 2638: 2634: 2633: 2632: 2628: 2621: 2620: 2619: 2615: 2608: 2605: 2604: 2603: 2600: 2598: 2593: 2591: 2581: 2574: 2572: 2569: 2567: 2562: 2560: 2554: 2553: 2552: 2548: 2535: 2534: 2533: 2530: 2528: 2523: 2521: 2515: 2511: 2507: 2503: 2502: 2501: 2500: 2497: 2493: 2486: 2482: 2478: 2477: 2476: 2475: 2472: 2463: 2454: 2450: 2446: 2442: 2441: 2438: 2435: 2432: 2427: 2413: 2410: 2408: 2403: 2401: 2395: 2392: 2391: 2390: 2386: 2382: 2374: 2373: 2372: 2369: 2367: 2362: 2360: 2354: 2353: 2352: 2351: 2347: 2343: 2335: 2323: 2320: 2318: 2313: 2311: 2305: 2304: 2303: 2302: 2298: 2294: 2283: 2282: 2279: 2273: 2261: 2254: 2251: 2249: 2244: 2242: 2236: 2235:in some cases 2232: 2231:Imaginatorium 2229: 2228: 2227: 2226: 2222: 2218: 2217:Imaginatorium 2214: 2210: 2205: 2202: 2200: 2189: 2186: 2184: 2179: 2177: 2170: 2166: 2165: 2164: 2163: 2159: 2155: 2151: 2138: 2135: 2133: 2128: 2126: 2118: 2113: 2112: 2111: 2110: 2106: 2102: 2087: 2083: 2079: 2075: 2074: 2073: 2070: 2068: 2063: 2061: 2055: 2054: 2053: 2052: 2048: 2044: 2040: 2033:WayBack Medic 2030: 2029: 2025: 2021: 2017: 2007: 2004: 2003: 2002: 2001: 2000: 1979: 1975: 1971: 1967: 1966: 1963: 1962: 1961: 1957: 1953: 1947: 1946:Cyberpower678 1942: 1941: 1940: 1937: 1935: 1930: 1928: 1917: 1916: 1915: 1909: 1900: 1899: 1898: 1895: 1893: 1888: 1886: 1877: 1868: 1863: 1862: 1861: 1860: 1856: 1852: 1848: 1844: 1829: 1826: 1822: 1821: 1820: 1819: 1816: 1813: 1811: 1806: 1804: 1795: 1790: 1789: 1788: 1787: 1784: 1776: 1767: 1764: 1761: 1760: 1754: 1750: 1749: 1748: 1745: 1743: 1738: 1736: 1729: 1728: 1727: 1726: 1723: 1720: 1719: 1713: 1709: 1702: 1694: 1692: 1688: 1676: 1673: 1671: 1666: 1664: 1658: 1657: 1656: 1655: 1651: 1647: 1643: 1635: 1629: 1628: 1624: 1620: 1616: 1611: 1608: 1604: 1598: 1594: 1580: 1576: 1575:North America 1571: 1570: 1569: 1566: 1564: 1559: 1557: 1549: 1544: 1543: 1542: 1541: 1537: 1536:North America 1532: 1522: 1521: 1517: 1513: 1508: 1507: 1503: 1499: 1494: 1489: 1488: 1485: 1484: 1483: 1479: 1465: 1453: 1450: 1448: 1443: 1441: 1435: 1430: 1429: 1428: 1427: 1423: 1419: 1403: 1400: 1398: 1393: 1391: 1385: 1381: 1380: 1379: 1373: 1364: 1363: 1362: 1359: 1357: 1352: 1350: 1343: 1336: 1331: 1330: 1329: 1328: 1322: 1307: 1306: 1302: 1298: 1294: 1289: 1286: 1282: 1276: 1272: 1258: 1255: 1253: 1248: 1246: 1240: 1239: 1238: 1237: 1236: 1235: 1231: 1227: 1219: 1216: 1214: 1209: 1207: 1198: 1189: 1184: 1183: 1182: 1181: 1177: 1173: 1166: 1156: 1152: 1148: 1147:Peter coxhead 1144: 1143: 1142: 1139: 1137: 1132: 1130: 1123: 1122: 1121: 1120: 1116: 1112: 1111:Peter coxhead 1105: 1098: 1080: 1077: 1075: 1070: 1068: 1061: 1053: 1045: 1044: 1043: 1039: 1033: 1032: 1031: 1028: 1026: 1021: 1019: 1009: 1008: 1007: 1003: 998: 997: 996: 995: 991: 985: 975: 974: 968: 956: 952: 945: 938: 928: 924: 922: 918: 914: 910: 906: 902: 898: 894: 893:Samuel Butler 890: 886: 882: 881: 876: 875: 874:Bildungsroman 870: 865: 863: 859: 858: 853: 849: 848: 843: 839: 835: 831: 827: 823: 821: 817: 801: 798: 793: 786: 785: 784: 781: 779: 774: 772: 766: 765: 764: 763: 762: 761: 758: 753: 746: 742: 732: 731: 727: 723: 719: 715: 711: 706: 696: 693: 691: 686: 684: 676: 671: 670: 666: 663: 656: 655: 653: 649: 645: 644:North America 640: 634: 628: 627: 625: 615: 608: 596: 593: 591: 586: 584: 576: 571: 570: 564: 562: 559: 557: 552: 551: 545: 538: 534: 530: 526: 522: 521: 517: 513: 510: 505: 497: 496: 492: 488: 484: 479: 476: 472: 468: 458: 457: 453: 449: 444: 440: 436: 431: 430: 426: 422: 418: 403: 402: 399: 395: 382: 379: 372: 371: 366: 362: 361: 357: 356:North America 352: 348: 347: 343:and upcoming 342: 341: 336: 330: 322: 315: 308: 296: 293: 291: 286: 284: 276: 275: 274: 273: 269: 265: 260: 246: 241: 237: 231: 228: 227: 226: 223: 221: 216: 214: 208: 203: 198: 197: 192: 187: 183: 177: 174: 173: 171: 170: 169: 168: 163: 159: 150: 147: 144: 140: 139: 138: 135: 132: 130: 126: 122: 118: 117: 111: 109: 103: 101: 97: 93: 89: 85: 73: 64: 59: 51: 46: 37: 32: 19: 6642: 6625: 6616:Happy happy! 6602: 6572: 6568: 6567: 6507: 6497: 6478: 6470: 6464: 6415: 6408: 6383: 6368: 6361: 6336: 6319: 6312: 6294: 6287: 6263: 6236: 6230: 6207: 6199: 6197: 6171: 6129: 6110: 6085: 6049: 6042: 6025: 6018: 5991: 5971: 5932: 5931: 5919: 5918: 5887: 5880: 5857: 5834: 5808: 5801: 5770: 5751: 5744: 5695: 5691:Barrel bomb 5658: 5646: 5605: 5598: 5589: 5575: 5571: 5568: 5529:Matthiaspaul 5514: 5507: 5491:Matthiaspaul 5472: 5438: 5431: 5415:Matthiaspaul 5392: 5385: 5369:Matthiaspaul 5361: 5357: 5319:Matthiaspaul 5314:the editing. 5292: 5285: 5266:Matthiaspaul 5263: 5241: 5238: 5219: 5177: 5170: 5148: 5117: 5110: 5087: 5079: 5071: 5054: 5045: 5031: 5024: 5011: 5004: 4974: 4967: 4962:example edit 4940: 4932: 4923: 4916: 4907: 4898: 4891: 4886: 4850: 4831: 4824: 4791: 4784: 4764: 4743: 4705: 4698: 4671: 4661: 4650:|archiveurl= 4643: 4608: 4601: 4570: 4558: 4538: 4515: 4500:Andrew Scott 4493: 4478: 4471: 4452: 4444: 4441:hexadecimal? 4403: 4396: 4370: 4363: 4339: 4324: 4317: 4300:|deadurl=yes 4283: 4269:Michaelmalak 4262: 4247: 4246: 4241: 4231: 4187:— Preceding 4183: 4155: 4107: 4100: 4077: 4058: 4028: 4022: 4019: 4017: 4013: 3995: 3946: 3931: 3924: 3909:this message 3906: 3892: 3885: 3878: 3864: 3857: 3804: 3777: 3769: 3763: 3762: 3733: 3723: 3716: 3697: 3678: 3671: 3640: 3633: 3607: 3576: 3569: 3545: 3525: 3505: 3487: 3484: 3469: 3466: 3450:Gerda Arendt 3447: 3410: 3398: 3397: 3380: 3373: 3322: 3305: 3298: 3276:saving to IA 3258: 3251: 3243: 3223: 3216: 3169: 3162: 3126: 3119: 3104:-- then run 3058: 3051: 3047: 3044: 3039: 3034: 3029: 3024: 3019: 3015: 3008: 2973: 2966: 2916: 2909: 2857: 2850: 2836: 2818: 2811: 2773: 2766: 2731: 2724: 2673: 2651: 2644: 2637:medicapi.nim 2596: 2589: 2565: 2558: 2539:|archiveurl= 2526: 2519: 2481:your message 2466: 2436: 2406: 2399: 2365: 2358: 2331: 2316: 2309: 2289: 2264: 2247: 2240: 2234: 2212: 2208: 2206: 2203: 2197: 2182: 2175: 2146: 2131: 2124: 2117:Greg Lindahl 2097: 2066: 2059: 2036: 2013: 1997: 1933: 1926: 1891: 1884: 1839: 1809: 1802: 1780: 1755: 1741: 1734: 1714: 1695: 1684: 1669: 1662: 1646:chris_j_wood 1639: 1612: 1590: 1562: 1555: 1528: 1509: 1490: 1481: 1477: 1475: 1461: 1446: 1439: 1415: 1396: 1389: 1384:WaybackMedic 1355: 1348: 1342:WaybackMedic 1313: 1290: 1271:Aaron Swartz 1268: 1251: 1244: 1222: 1212: 1205: 1169: 1135: 1128: 1094: 1073: 1066: 1060:Brayton Ives 1024: 1017: 981: 978:Works not by 960: 925: 920: 912: 904: 896: 888: 885:Thomas Hardy 878: 872: 866: 855: 845: 829: 824: 819: 815: 813: 777: 770: 738: 710:The Klansman 707: 704: 689: 682: 658: 632: 631: 622: 621: 589: 582: 555: 549: 541: 524: 515: 480: 464: 442: 432: 409: 391: 374: 344: 338: 334: 333: 289: 282: 256: 219: 212: 153: 136: 133: 114: 112: 107: 104: 100:edit notices 77: 52: 38: 25: 6523:—Preceding 5841:Good work! 5222:WhisperToMe 4719:Alright. -- 4447:Hexadecimal 4390:September 8 4292:|deadurl=no 3542:BOT problem 3476:Noël_Coward 3467:Greetings, 3436:Der Prozess 3345:me (i.e. {{ 3114:Data: cd .. 2169:WP:Link rot 2014:Thank you, 1836:Re: Webcite 1701:sourcecheck 917:James Joyce 905:Tono-Bungay 901:H. G. Wells 852:James Joyce 842:Franz Kafka 834:Henry James 830:Copperfield 820:Copperfield 718:Born to Win 471:14 November 439:red herring 259:Champ Clark 6581:. Cheers, 6571:Enjoy the 6222:topic bans 4571:There are 4520:. Thanks, 4304:|dead-url= 4041:GreenC bot 3978:GreenC bot 3826:GreenC bot 3366:Biosthmors 3333:Biosthmors 3110:./medic .. 2680:a week ago 2198:This edit 2154:Tisquesusa 1825:Saukkomies 1794:Saukkomies 1783:Saukkomies 1617:. Thanks, 1310:IA API bug 1295:. Thanks, 953:. You can 838:Dostoevsky 448:Clepsydrae 421:Clepsydrae 353:. Cheers, 337:Enjoy the 264:Opencooper 6579:Knowledge 6403:this link 6387:SVass2016 6218:site bans 5937:Halloween 5923:Halloween 5864:bender235 5767:A 15 Road 5741:Good. -- 4853:this edit 4847:BOT error 4721:bender235 4674:bender235 4624:bender235 4584:bender235 4504:Read the 4386:August 29 4342:this edit 4310:dead link 4296:|deadurl= 4284:sometimes 4164:bender235 4080:this edit 3953:this edit 3949:this edit 3903:Sorry ... 3807:this edit 3656:bender235 3614:bender235 3610:this task 3480:consensus 3360:wp:weight 3319:Greetings 3246:User:Czar 3190:", line 1 3075:|deadurl= 2930:compile: 2874:dead link 2580:dead link 2213:dead link 2078:Zigzig20s 2043:Zigzig20s 1753:Fayenatic 1712:Fayenatic 1687:this edit 1601:Read the 1466:? Cheers 1279:Read the 1226:Observer6 1188:Observer6 1172:Observer6 575:Cullen328 351:Knowledge 84:templates 6628:New Year 6504:Mixpanel 6471:Vine.com 6467:Vine.com 6174:Kanguole 6168:Rollback 6158:xaosflux 6117:xaosflux 6005::Offline 5979:xaosflux 5347::Offline 5154:Mikeblas 5139::Offline 5091:Mikeblas 4989:Mikeblas 4947:Mikeblas 4908:This is 4768:contribs 4748:editing 4201:contribs 4189:unsigned 3913:Bruce1ee 3846::Offline 3736:Camimack 3700:Camimack 3586:Thanks. 3533:xaosflux 3513:xaosflux 3392:Precious 2700:format: 2695:cite web 2470:xaosflux 2277:xaosflux 2209:cbignore 1876:cbignore 1632:Edit to 1275:Scribner 1197:cbignore 1038:Nunh-huh 1002:Nunh-huh 990:Nunh-huh 969::Offline 931:Talkback 883:(1861), 735:Lemelson 705:Hello, 639:New Year 544:blisters 487:Mathglot 443:reverted 123:and the 6525:undated 6484:HAMPION 6435:Jim1138 6349::Online 6126:Bot war 5862:. ;) -- 5794:wayback 5665:WP:CORP 5216:Wayback 5196::Online 4878::Online 4857:Keith D 4809::Online 4758:Granger 4522:DPL bot 4288:example 4242:Muffled 4222:Marinbu 4193:Marinbu 4123:Keith D 4084:Keith D 3960:Keith D 3880:Dhtwiki 3811:Dhtwiki 3782:on the 3770:Merging 3694:Thanks. 3588:Keith D 3553:Keith D 3528:task #2 3325:wp:lead 3180:driver: 3082:reflist 2934:I have 2260:WP:BOWN 1910::Online 1619:DPL bot 1597:Liu Xia 1297:DPL bot 857:Ulysses 847:Amerika 826:Tolstoy 712:on the 537:chisels 533:hammers 394:Lingzhi 88:modules 44:--: --> 6626:Happy 5921:Happy 5729:Meters 5713:Meters 5698:Meters 5661:WP:GNG 5149:should 4423:Patrug 4346:Patrug 4029:(talk) 4020:Yellow 3423:, for 3343:notify 2479:I saw 2377:/save/ 2338:/save/ 2293:Calaka 2006:Survey 1531:at AfD 550:Cullen 435:WP:3RR 398:(talk) 376:Use {{ 206:. Done 6520:GDWin 6512:GDWin 6409:Green 6362:Green 6313:Green 6288:Green 6267:Versa 6138:DonFB 6043:Green 6019:Green 5881:Green 5802:Green 5745:Green 5599:Green 5595:. -- 5508:Green 5432:Green 5386:Green 5362:won't 5286:Green 5171:Green 5111:Green 5025:Green 5005:Green 4968:Green 4945:. -- 4917:Green 4910:fixed 4892:Green 4825:Green 4785:Green 4699:Green 4695:. -- 4646:|url= 4602:Green 4472:Green 4397:Green 4364:Green 4318:Green 4232:links 4101:Green 4023:Dingo 3925:Green 3886:Green 3858:Green 3717:Green 3672:Green 3634:Green 3570:Green 3526:Your 3374:Green 3299:Green 3252:Green 3217:Green 3163:Green 3120:Green 3052:Green 2967:Green 2910:Green 2851:Green 2812:Green 2767:Green 2725:Green 2645:Green 2590:Green 2559:Green 2520:Green 2400:Green 2359:Green 2310:Green 2241:Green 2176:Green 2125:Green 2060:Green 1970:Dan56 1952:Dan56 1927:Green 1885:Green 1867:Dan56 1851:Dan56 1843:Dan56 1803:Green 1777:edits 1763:ondon 1735:Green 1722:ondon 1663:Green 1556:Green 1440:Green 1390:Green 1349:Green 1245:Green 1206:Green 1129:Green 1067:Green 1018:Green 771:Green 683:Green 583:Green 283:Green 213:Green 108:after 16:< 6516:talk 6508:keep 6439:talk 6391:talk 6272:geek 6247:talk 6208:The 6155:. — 6151:See 6142:talk 6096:talk 6065:Chat 6002:Chat 5976:. — 5967:BRFA 5868:talk 5860:this 5781:talk 5733:talk 5717:talk 5702:talk 5677:talk 5669:CNBC 5655:Zeek 5622:talk 5582:talk 5533:talk 5495:talk 5473:copy 5456:Chat 5419:talk 5373:talk 5358:will 5344:Chat 5323:talk 5270:talk 5226:talk 5193:Chat 5158:talk 5136:Chat 5095:talk 4993:talk 4951:talk 4875:Chat 4861:talk 4806:Chat 4762:talk 4754:P$ C 4725:talk 4678:talk 4628:talk 4588:talk 4526:talk 4459:talk 4427:talk 4350:talk 4306:and 4273:talk 4197:talk 4168:talk 4127:talk 4088:talk 4065:talk 4045:talk 4008:and 4000:and 3982:talk 3964:talk 3951:and 3843:Chat 3830:talk 3815:talk 3792:talk 3740:talk 3704:talk 3660:talk 3618:talk 3592:talk 3557:talk 3490:2007 3488:Dane 3454:talk 3419:and 3341:pls 3337:talk 3323:Per 3282:czar 3203:czar 3145:czar 3138:Here 3090:czar 2991:czar 2946:czar 2936:math 2884:czar 2794:czar 2746:czar 2707:czar 2626:czar 2613:czar 2546:czar 2514:here 2510:here 2506:here 2491:czar 2449:talk 2385:talk 2346:talk 2297:talk 2221:talk 2167:The 2158:talk 2105:talk 2101:Greg 2082:talk 2047:talk 2024:talk 2018:via 1974:talk 1956:talk 1920:url= 1907:Chat 1855:talk 1847:talk 1710:. – 1650:talk 1623:talk 1516:talk 1502:talk 1482:andt 1422:talk 1412:Talk 1371:Chat 1335:C678 1320:Chat 1301:talk 1230:talk 1176:talk 1151:talk 1115:talk 966:Chat 810:hold 791:MALL 751:MALL 726:talk 535:and 529:axes 500:2016 491:talk 452:talk 425:talk 268:talk 240:talk 236:MSGJ 202:MSGJ 186:talk 182:MSGJ 162:talk 158:MSGJ 86:and 5942:– 5663:or 4987:-- 4662:to 4539:On 4506:FAQ 4234:to 4061:byo 3805:In 3630:-- 3370:-- 3048:-- 2963:-- 2959:to 2757:Nim 2686:or 1689:at 1603:FAQ 1525:AfD 1478:red 1366::P— 1281:FAQ 1163:re 919:'s 911:'s 903:'s 895:'s 887:'s 796:JIM 756:JIM 278:--> 6518:) 6441:) 6393:) 6249:) 6241:. 6220:, 6144:) 6098:) 6090:. 5870:) 5796:}} 5792:{{ 5783:) 5735:) 5719:) 5704:) 5679:) 5624:) 5584:) 5535:) 5527:-- 5497:) 5489:-- 5421:) 5413:-- 5375:) 5367:-- 5325:) 5317:-- 5272:) 5228:) 5160:) 5131:.— 5097:) 5067:}} 5061:{{ 4995:) 4953:) 4863:) 4770:) 4727:) 4680:) 4630:) 4590:) 4547:. 4528:) 4461:) 4450:? 4429:) 4352:) 4312:}} 4308:{{ 4275:) 4203:) 4199:• 4170:) 4129:) 4090:) 4067:) 4047:) 3984:) 3966:) 3832:) 3817:) 3794:) 3742:) 3706:) 3662:) 3620:) 3594:) 3559:) 3456:) 3448:-- 3443:! 3415:, 3362:/ 3339:) 3085:}} 3079:{{ 2877:}} 2871:{{ 2698:}} 2692:{{ 2583:}} 2577:{{ 2451:) 2387:) 2348:) 2299:) 2223:) 2160:) 2107:) 2084:) 2049:) 2026:) 1976:) 1958:) 1879:}} 1873:{{ 1857:) 1704:}} 1698:{{ 1652:) 1625:) 1518:) 1504:) 1424:) 1303:) 1232:) 1200:}} 1194:{{ 1178:) 1153:) 1117:) 1107:}} 1101:{{ 1055:}} 1049:{{ 923:. 915:, 907:, 899:, 891:, 860:. 728:) 563:– 531:, 493:) 454:) 427:) 396:♦ 270:) 238:· 184:· 160:· 131:. 102:. 6630:! 6514:( 6481:C 6437:( 6416:C 6389:( 6369:C 6320:C 6295:C 6245:( 6140:( 6094:( 6050:C 6026:C 5939:! 5925:! 5888:C 5866:( 5809:C 5779:( 5752:C 5731:( 5715:( 5700:( 5675:( 5620:( 5606:C 5580:( 5531:( 5515:C 5493:( 5439:C 5417:( 5393:C 5371:( 5336:) 5332:( 5321:( 5293:C 5268:( 5224:( 5178:C 5156:( 5118:C 5093:( 5032:C 5012:C 4991:( 4975:C 4949:( 4924:C 4899:C 4859:( 4832:C 4792:C 4765:· 4760:( 4750:P 4739:P 4723:( 4706:C 4676:( 4626:( 4609:C 4586:( 4524:( 4512:. 4479:C 4457:( 4453:— 4425:( 4404:C 4371:C 4348:( 4325:C 4271:( 4224:: 4220:@ 4217:) 4213:( 4195:( 4166:( 4125:( 4108:C 4086:( 4063:( 4043:( 4014:" 3980:( 3962:( 3932:C 3893:C 3865:C 3828:( 3813:( 3790:( 3738:( 3724:C 3702:( 3679:C 3658:( 3641:C 3616:( 3590:( 3577:C 3555:( 3452:( 3381:C 3368:: 3364:@ 3347:U 3335:( 3306:C 3259:C 3224:C 3170:C 3127:C 3059:C 2974:C 2917:C 2858:C 2819:C 2785:@ 2774:C 2732:C 2652:C 2597:C 2566:C 2527:C 2447:( 2407:C 2383:( 2366:C 2344:( 2317:C 2295:( 2248:C 2219:( 2183:C 2156:( 2132:C 2119:: 2115:@ 2103:( 2080:( 2067:C 2045:( 2022:( 1972:( 1954:( 1948:: 1944:@ 1934:C 1892:C 1869:: 1865:@ 1853:( 1845:( 1810:C 1796:: 1792:@ 1758:L 1742:C 1717:L 1670:C 1648:( 1621:( 1609:. 1563:C 1550:: 1546:@ 1514:( 1500:( 1480:g 1476:f 1447:C 1420:( 1397:C 1356:C 1337:: 1333:@ 1299:( 1287:. 1252:C 1228:( 1213:C 1190:: 1186:@ 1174:( 1149:( 1136:C 1113:( 1074:C 1025:C 961:— 946:. 789:S 778:C 749:S 724:( 690:C 677:: 673:@ 635:, 626:! 590:C 577:: 573:@ 546:. 539:? 489:( 450:( 423:( 290:C 266:( 242:) 234:( 220:C 204:: 200:@ 188:) 180:( 164:) 156:(

Index

User talk:GreenC
Talk Page 2016
--> 2015 Talk Page
2017 Talk Page <--

templates
modules
template protection
title blacklist
edit notices
Knowledge:Template editor
wise template editing
criteria for revocation
secure your password
All template-protected pages
Request fully-protected templates or modules be downgraded to template protection
MSGJ
talk
14:40, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
MSGJ
talk
12:32, 15 December 2015 (UTC)
MSGJ
Green
C
14:21, 16 December 2015 (UTC)
Knowledge:Guide to requests for adminship
MSGJ
talk
22:43, 16 December 2015 (UTC)

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑