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User:SteveChervitzTrutane

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    This is aWikipediauser page.
    This is not an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other thanWikipedia, you are viewing amirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user whom this page is about may have no personal affiliation with any site other thanWikipedia. The original page is located athttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:SteveChervitzTrutane.

    Welcome to my Wikipedia user page!

    Stephen Chervitz Trutane is my official, legal name though it was originallyStephen Allen Chervitz, as describedhere. So you might know me as having the surnameTrutane or asChervitz, depending on what era of my life or circle of friends you know me from. I respond to either, so use whichever one you want. For simplicity, you can just call me "Steve".

    Bio

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    I'm currently on asabbatical from a long-term role as abioinformatics software engineer in thebiotech industry, exploring the world ofphysical fitness through my work with theAthlete Body Shop. Previously, I worked atPersonalis from 2012 to 2023 enablingprecision medicine forimmuno-oncology by providing tools to process humangenome sequence data fromhigh-throughput sequencing, with a focus on annotating and helping scientists interpretvariations ingermline &somatic genomic data (genome,exome,transcriptome) from individuals and theirtumors. Before that, I worked on genome analysis software atOmicia(now Fabric Genomics) (2010-2012) and before that atAffymetrix(nowThermo Fisher) (2000-2010) where I helped annotateDNA microarray probe sets for end-user scientists via theNetAffx web portal. I joined Affymetrix in October 2000 after their acquisition ofNeomorphic which I had joined in September 1998 after finishing a post-doc position at Stanford inDavid Botstein's group (1996-1998), working on theSaccharomyces Genome Database. So computers and biological "omics" data are my long-time friends.

    I have a B.A. inbiology fromMacalester College and a Ph.D. fromCU Boulder'sMCDB department, working underProf. Joseph Falke in the biochemistry department doing wet-labmolecular biology experiments on achemoreceptor that mediatesbacterial chemotaxis. I did ample amounts ofsite-directed mutagenesis andin vitrosignal transduction assays, as well as 3D molecular graphics visualization and protein structure analysis and other fun stuff (like teaching myselfC).

    After Boulder, I shifted directions into the world ofgenomics (orpost-genomics) joiningDavid Botstein's lab (while he was atStanford) working on theSaccharomyces Genome Database (S. cerevisiae a.k.a. baker's yeast, was the firsteukaryote to have it'sgenome completelysequenced, which happened in April 1996, about 3 months after I started with SGD). While at SGD, I developed lots ofPerl modules for working with bioinformatics data and contributed most of this code to the open sourceBioPerl project, which was just getting started around this time, as noted in theearly BioPerl history.

    I am no longer actively involved with BioPerl development, but continue to be a fan of theOpen Bioinformatics Foundation (andopen source software for science generally). Other projects I've been involved with includeBioDAS,GenoViz, andHCLS projects. I'm on the board of theFGED Society starting in 2002, acting as their secretary and webmaster between 2010 and their dissolution in 2021.

    In my spare time, I'm either hanging out with myfamily, training for ororganizingtriathlons, promotinghealth and fitness,tweeting,contributing to Wikipedia (my stats), or trying to help humanity with the organization I founded,TeamHuman.org. Wikipedia, I feel, is well-aligned with the "promoting a shared understanding" goal of TeamHuman.org.

    Other online hangouts

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    • The Young Encyclopedia Devotee
    Photograph of teenage Steve Chervitz Trutane sitting at desk with World Book encyclopedias, ca. 1981 (16yo)


    Steve Chervitz Trutane in April 2012
    Unified login:SteveChervitzTrutane is the unique login of this user for all publicWikimediaprojects.
    This user is a member of theMolecular & Cellular Biology WikiProject
    WikiProject GeneticsThis user is a participant in
    WikiProject Genetics.
    This user lives in or hails from the U.S.State of California.
    @This user can be reached by email attrutane@gmail.com.
    Icon This user has been on Wikipedia for19 years and 25 days.
    This editor is anApprentice Editor and is entitled to display thisService Badge.
    Quality, not quantity.This user believes that a user'sedit count does not necessarily reflect on thevalue of their contributions toWikipedia.
    This user supports theCreative Commons.
    This user pledges to return to
    Old-fashioned Wikipedian values.
    enThis user is anative speaker of theEnglish language.


    Support Wikipedia!

    My Wikipedia story: When I was a kid I used to browse a physical encyclopedia (I think it was aWorld Book Encyclopedia ca. 1974), reading random pages here and there. One day when I was 13 or 14 years old, I came across a page that changed my life, specifically a section describingmolecular biology. It blew me away that we humans have figured out thegenetic code, a code that nearly all cells on earth use for creating proteins from DNA. My teachers had never mentioned the topic at all! The rest of my life has essentially been following up on what I stumbled up on that day, pursuing a Ph.D. and then working on genomics for 25 years in the biotech industry.

    I've been contributing to English wikipedia sporadically since ca. 2008 and enjoy the feeling that I'm creating a knowledge resource that will be read and augmented by others, and persist over time. Perhaps I will add content that will inspire someone else and alter the course of their life as mine was altered long ago by that static encyclopedia. It almost feels like I'm giving back to the encyclopedia gods that led me to where I am today. Sure, wikipedia has issues, but I have seen it evolve and self-correct over time via community input, keeping up with our evolving state of knowledge in real time -- and it's available worldwide via the internet for free. Awesome.

    Wikipedia Contributions

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    Here are a few highlights of my contributions. This listing isn't necessarily current, so checkhere for what I've been up to.

    I still consider myself to becutting my teeth as a Wikipedia editor (though Wikipedia considers me established enough to edit some semi-protected pages, such asBarack Obama, which I haveedited on occasion). Many of my Wikipedia contributions focus on my domains of expertise:Molecular and cellular biologyBioinformaticsGenomicsFunctional genomicsGenes

    However, I have wide-ranging interests so you may find my edits outside these areas, inodd corners of Wikipedia.

    Some pages I've created

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    Some pages I've contributed substantially to

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    • Science
      • Genome annotation(I wrote a page related to this on the originalWikiomics (archived), later folded intoOpenWetWare.)
      • Retrotransposon(Verified and added citation supporting claim that 42% of the human genome is made up of these buggers.)
      • Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act andGenetic discrimination
      • War on Cancer(I've greatly expanded this from stub state starting in Oct 2008. Continues to be a work in progress.)
        • I initially redirected it toNat'l Cancer Act of '71, then decided it was better to redirect the other way around.
        • On 2 Oct 2009, I participated in the Lance Armstrong Foundation's "LIVESTRONG Day" by registering avirtual event where did my part to raise cancer awareness by inviting people to the WoC wikipedia page. Not sure if anyone noticed.
        • Some google stats on WoC searches as of 2 Oct 09: the WP page is now on the first page of results, though near the bottom. I take this as a sign of progress of my efforts, as the WoC page has usually been quite distant from the top when I've checked earlier this year. Total google WoC hits on 2 Oct 09: 45M (unquoted), 135k (quoted).Update 3 Nov 2009: WoC page is now #2 out of 47.5M total (unquoted) and #3 out of 327K (quoted). Hot topic!Update 13 Nov 2009: WoC page is now #1 out of 52.3M total (unquoted) and #2 out of 142K (quoted -- the previous 327k seems anomalous).
      • Gene expression techniques
      • Genetic disorder
      • Cancer and inflammation(discussion I had on a now-archivedCancer talk page withJFW andUser:Franamax)
        • JFW is looking for more authoritative references describing a 'grand unified' theory for howinflammation relates to cancer before putting anything about it in the cancer article.
        • I think the cancer-inflammation field is rich enough that it deserves its own page & plan to create when I get a chance.
        • This would avoid provide a common, main article to link to from eithercancer orinflammation.
        • Cancer article is quite big: 96kb as of 12 May 2012
      • FGED Society(Major re-write, page rename. Formerly known as 'MGED')
      • Affymetrix(My former employer)
      • Treatment of cancer(my proposal to rename this page fromManagement of cancer wasapproved... nearly 7 years after my proposal. I hope there were no cancer patients waiting on that change :o).
    • Non-science
      • Jack LaLanne
      • Joe Ranft(Added death section after watchingCars.)
        • Some of myoriginal contribution on Joe's page has since been removed on the basis of beingWP:OR orWP:POV. I'm not sure about this removal, since I'm pointing out a coincidental fact between the circumstances of his death and a major theme of the movie he was makingwhen he died. Here's what I said:The road on which Joe died, Highway 1, is akin to Route 66 featured in Cars in the way it "works/moves with the land" (quote from movie). Meandering along the scenic California coastline, Highway 1 is a very much a road where appreciating the journey is as important as reaching one's destination, a theme of Cars. Maybe I'll bring this up on Joe's talk page.
      • Scat singing(In the "Origin" section, I added the Jelly Roll Morton quote from Alan Lomax interview.)
      • Hebrew cantillation andHebrew language(Posted links toaudio example of cantillation I uploaded to Wikimedia Commons. Had to convert the mp3 I got from Cantor Seth intoOgg format. A little tricky.)

    Assorted contributions

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    • Douglas Adams(Speculated on histalk page that that his 'trilogy of five books' joke derives from aMonty Python skit.)
    • Crips(Added statement and citations about the roots of gang activity in So Central LA. Important issue and article. Definitely could use expansion.)
    • The Jedi Code(Found it in one of my son's booksI Am A Jedi byQui-Gon Jinn and saw that it was not in -- or had been deleted from -- theJedi page.)
      • OK, the code has been removed once again from the article. Not clear what's the beef.Here's the version of the article with the Jedi code as I added it.
      • The definitive article about the Jedi Code can be found inWookiepedia.
      • My attempt to add the Wookiepedia citation to theJediism article wasreverted as being an unreliable source. However, being a wiki, Wookiepedia's reliabilityshould improve over time, eh?
      • I still feel that the actual Jedi Code itself should appear in Wikipedia, perhaps on a dedicated page. It could cover alternative versions of the code has it has appeared in different places. One day, when the Force feels strong, I'll attempt it.
    • 'Ghouls' vs. 'Zombies'(See my 'Ghouls' sub-section on this archived page -- thisdiscussion page gets archiveda lot.)
    • Drupe(Minor update to includeCashew among the list of plants the produce drupes)
    • Septuple meter(AddedLed Zeppelin's "The Ocean," the main riff of which has one bar of4
      4
      and one bar of7
      8
      .)
      • This piece can also be counted as a single bar of15
        8
        , but that is not the most 'reduced' form towards which musical types seem to strive.
      • It was originally included in the "List of musical works in unusual time signatures" (MWUTS) page but got removed, probably because it lacked a decent citable source describing the time signature.
      • Researching this has revealed some insight into Wikipedia culture as it seems one Wikipedian decided to maintain the MWUTS page outside of Wikipedia after pushback from other editors regarding the reliability of sources. This person maintained his list atdkap.info/oddtime.php from May 2009 till April 2017. Herethe last archived copy of it.
      • What's the lesson here? If editors feel the need to leave Wikipedia over disputes with other editors, that seems like a bad result indicating a problem with the system. Perhaps the dkap.info author's contribution could have been maintained on a talk page or in his sandbox, or added to the article with a "citation needed" flag. As it is, Wikipedia lost the energy of a knowledgeable person -- an unfortunate outcome.
      • Btw, there are some interesting works listed on that MWUTS page, such as the progressive metal "Schism" in6+12
        8
        time (which must be an average of the various time changes in that song).
    • A Magnificient Text Book Of Pharmacovigillance
      • I found a "text book" example of plagiarism from Wikipedia, noted on the talk page ofContract research organization.
      • In addition to having more than one typo in the title of the book, the authors also lifted one of the citation anchors "[4]" appearing in the Wikipedia article!
      • Unattributed use of text like this from Wikipedia is widespread, I suspect. I found other web pages that contained lifted verbiage from the CRO page, such asthis.
      • While a form of flattery, such copying can be problematic when errors are copied from Wikipedia articles. After the errors are fixed in Wikipedia, the untold copies are not. There's no way to track these copies other than by Google searching.
      • It would be cool to have a way to signal 3rd party websites that the Wikipedia text they copied has been changed, signaling that the copied text may contain an error or other fix.
    • 2019–20 coronavirus pandemic -(Added citation about cytokine storms on 19 Mar 2020)
      • I also noted the pandemic in the history section of theCytokine release syndrome article, along with citations for cytokine storms as a cause of death due toCOVID-19. The history section of CRS was subsequently (May 2020) moved to theCytokine storm page.
      • Cytokines comprise a fascinatingly complex system of immuno-modulators that's a hot topic of biomedical research. Here'sa figure (I tweeted via @Awesomics, Nov 2018), that provides a glimpse of this complexity.
    • Junk foodI unskewed thesatirical poster of a vending machine to correct fordistortion in the original.

    • Earthing
      • I'm skeptical of the electro-chemical claims of howEarthing works, but am a strong believer in the benefits — physical & mental — of going barefoot as much as possible.
        • For example, the primary biological free radicalsuperoxide (coming from our consumption of oxygen), is negatively charged, and so would repel and not be neutralized by any electrons absorbed into the body thru direct contact with the Earth, as I noted inthis tweet (@barefootr = me).
        • When it comes detoxifying superoxide and otherROS like hydrogen peroxide,superoxide dismutase (SOD) andcatalase have your back. Btw, SOD is also featured below in myPages of note section, and was alsonoted by barefootr.
        • IMHO, health benefits of walking barefoot on various natural surfaces mostly stem from they neural stimulation of our feet which are chock full of pressure-sensitive nerve endings. Walking & running without supportive shoes also improves our overall balance and specific strengthening of our feet, ankles, legs, & hips.
      • In April 2023, I came across an interestingstudy that quantitated current flow between the human body and ground, and also looked for evidence in support of some Earthing claims.
        • The study found a very weak current (<10 nanoamperes) but with no correlation to important body functions such as respiration and heart rate, making it a negative result for the Earthers.
        • I summarized these findings and added them to the Earthing section of theEnergy medicine page, but my contribution was quickly removed, being called "nonsense" without any further explanation. However, I feel this study is relevant to the article.
        • See mytopic on the Energy medicine Talk page (archived) where I discussed this study with other Wikipedians.
        • My impression from this "Energy medicine page experience" is that there's a strong anti-pseudoscience editorial force behind theEnergy medicine article. While it's a good thing to be skeptical and not let pseudoscience pass as real science, I think it would be fair to cite peer-reviewed studies of energy medicine-related claims, while pointing out scientific critiques of those studies. As it is, I feel that this sort of balance is lacking.

    Sandbox

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    potential contributions (my sandbox area)

    Licensing terms of my contributions

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    Dual licensed with the Creative Commons Attribution License version 3.0
    I agree to dual-license my text contributions, unless otherwise stated, underWikipedia's copyright terms and theCreative Commons Attribution license version 3.0. Please be aware that other contributors might not do the same, so if you want to use my contributions under the Creative Commons terms, please check theCC dual-license andMulti-licensing guides.


    NOTE: I actually don't have a strong preference to dual license my contributions with CC. I'm fine withWikimedia All Licensing. The only beef I have with Wikimedia licensing is that adding that template to my user page causes the complete contents of the page to be collapsed under a"More information. Licensing rights" box when using the Wikipedia mobile app. It doesn't behave that way in a web browser, so it may be a bug in the app(as of 9 May 2020). Nevertheless, I don't want to require users to expand a box in order to simply read my page...

    Wikipedia Picks

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    Some notable content I've come across in my Wikipedia travels. This is in a completely random order (added to the bottom as I find them), and non-exhaustive. May grow over time... or not.

    For the officially curated list of "Wikipedia picks," see the archives of the dailyfeature article andpicture that appear on theMain Page.

    Images of note

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    Pages of note

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    A mix of unrelated yet noteworthy topics.

    • Kármán vortex street as an explanation for theDyatlov Pass incident
      • Personally, I'm leaning towards theinfrasound explanation. I'd like to experience that natural phenomenon myself... in the daytime.
    • Man versus Horse Marathon - Seems like the horses shouldn't be handicapped by having to run with a human on their back,
      • or the humans should have to carry a heavy backpack.
      • Slate story mentioning this contest and describing the "runner" theory of human evolution:All Men Can't Jump
    • Phrases from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
      • Contains a classicAdams quote:"I may be a sorry case, but I don't write jokes in base 13."
    • Ray Dorset quote:"I should be retired, but my brain is like that of an 18 year old."
    • Anti-pattern - Quite a few of these, and not just for software engineering.
      • Great pedagogical value. I added some proposals to the Talk page.
    • Talk about Roseanne Barr's infamous tweet, and whether it warrants inclusion onValerie Jarrett's page.
    • RMS Titanic - Sank onTax Day 1912(the year before US federal income taxes actually started), and many died as a result of insufficient lifeboat passenger capacity stemming from "outdated maritime safety regulations."
      • Good example of what can happen when an industry moves faster than our ability to regulate it.
      • Subsequent maritime disasters with major fatalities,SS Eastland in 1915 andRMS Empress of Ireland in 1914, stemmed from regulatory over-correction in the 'wake' of the Titanic disaster.
    • Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?
    • Immunotherapy includes helminthic therapy (i.e. infection withwhipworms &hookworms)
      • Though the mechanism of how thesehelminths modulate the immune response, is unknown.
    • Matthew 5:5, the third of theBeatitudes ("blessed are the meek..."), contains an interesting linguistic note regarding the Greek word typically translated as 'meek':
      • it is not suggesting weakness but instead the way power is handled.
      • It is "strength under control".The English language does not have a word that translates conveying both gentleness and power together.
      • Makes one wonder how many other original terms used in the Bible are difficult to translate.
      • This linguistic note was originally included in the 'Analysis' section ofthe Matthew 5:5 article until 14 June 2021. I moved it into the interpretation section on 8 Oct 2023.

    • June 1962 Alcatraz escape attempt
      • Flagged as "appears to contradict itself on whether the escape attempt succeeded or failed." The U.S. Marshals Service investigation remains open to this day.
    • DevOps - Riddled with many editorial flags, mostly "unreliable source" or "citation needed".
      • 'DevOps' means different things to different people in the industry and there is apparently no definitive authority on the topic.
      • Irony here is that manyWikipedians would probably describe their day jobs as being in devops, I would bet.
      • Relevant article by an ITSME:DevOps vs DevSecOps (10 Mar 2021, archived)

    • Meaning of life - find enlightenment through Wikipedia. 🙏
    • Ineos 1:59 Challenge -Kipchoge's successful achievement of a sub-2-hour marathon is not recognized as an official world record, but did make it into the Guinness World Records.
      • How long before he or someone else makes it official? Could depend on the legalization of high-tech running shoes like he used.
      • Nike's 'AlphaFly' shoes like Eliud used are banned, but Nike's new 'VaporFly' shoes areofficially legal.
    • Superoxide dismutase - My favorite enzyme as it plays a vital role in antioxidant defense in nearly all living cells exposed to oxygen.
      • It's the most catalytically efficient enzyme known with a reaction rate that is limited only by how fast the reactants can diffuse (kcat/KM = ~7 x 109 M−1s−1).
      • It's ametalloprotein that relies on interesting metal ions for catalysis:Cu-Zn,Mn,Fe, orNi(underscoring the importance of a diverse, micronutrient-rich diet).
      • It's so important for life that the human genome has three different versions of it, customized for different cellular locales: cytoplasmic (SOD1), mitochondrial (SOD2), and extracellular (SOD3).
      • Mutations in SOD genes are implicated in notable diseases, such asLou Gehrig's disease.
      • An interestingresearch question is whethersupercentenarians have protective levels of SOD proteins, or SOD genetic variants, or SOD-regulatory gene variants.
        • AJuly 2020 study from Japan (open access) that looked at a number of relevant biomarkers (protein levels) did not find significant association of extracellular (EC) SOD3 with the super-old.
        • Note that they excluded individuals with the SOD3 R213G variant which is associated with high plasma levels of EC-SOD and an elevated risk for incidental ischemic heart disease, so there is a connection between SOD levels and cardiovascular health, but it's not a simple "more is better" relationship.
        • Also see thisJuly 2000 Italian study that tested for genetic markers associated with longevity (it's alsoOA). It looked at SOD1 and SOD2 and did not find any significant associations. Also covers the importance of correcting formultiple hypothesis testing.

    • Protocadherins - a.k.a "Pcdhs" = neural adhesion proteins, thought to provide an address code system for the developing nervous system.
      • "different subsets of Pcdhs genes are differentially expressed in individual neurons, a vast cell surface diversity may arise from this combinatorial expression... Pcdhs may provide a synaptic-address code for neuronal connectivity or a single-cell barcode for self-recognition/self-avoidance.
      • The Pcdh genes have an interesting "locus region" organization akin to the T-cell & B-cell receptor genes, which also depend on combinatorial complexity for their function. For examplePCDHA@.
      • Ubiquitously expressed in the brain (among other tissues), they play a big role in building the human brain -- the most advanced machine in the known universe. Keep an eye on these guys!
    • Normcore fashion
    • Red pill and blue pill
    • Scot Halpin -"who sojourned into the realm of the gods and returned anointed."
      • The 19yo from Iowa who answeredPete Townshend's call at the Cow Palace in 1973 after Keith Moon had trouble maintaining consciousness: ''"Can anybody here play the drums? I mean somebody good!"
      • The Whopaid tribute to him after he passed away in 2008.
    • Political gaffe - The idea for an article dedicated to gaffes made by politicians was born onDan Quayle's talk page.
    • Vermin Supreme - Could use some background on the origin of this moniker.
      • The talk page had a request from Mr. Supreme to have his real name removed, which was honored.
    • Pejorative terms for people (category)
      • Quite a litany of negative lingo. Likely outweighs the set of positive terms for people -- is there even such a category?
      • Here's a few positive terms to get the ball rolling:mensch (but notgutmensch),saint,gentleman and a scholar, samaritan, dear, star, savior, treasure, go-to guy, right-hand-man, angel, up-standing citizen.
      • Social justice warrior (SJW) has an interesting history: it started out positive in the 1990s, then became a pejorative in 2011 as a result of social media activity (Twitter).
      • The extensive & well-referencedlist of nicknames used by Donald Trump falls in a sub-category of the pejorative terms for people category.
      • George W. Bush's collection of nicknames was also fairly extensive. Many of his were neutral, brief forms of the person's full name.

    • Unusual articles - articles that have met the standard of unusualness.
    • Imprinted brain hypothesis
      • An intriguinggenomic imprinting theory that lacks scientific support.
      • TheMain Page on 5-6 Mar 2021 claimed"that the proposers of the imprinted brain hypothesis, which claims that autistic and schizotypal traits are opposites, had no background in behavioural genetics before proposing it," - but I don't see any such claim in the article.
    • Trump derangement syndrome a.k.a. "TDS"
      • A pseudo-cognitive bias with a complex origin & usage.
      • I think it's a reflection of how politics plays with our many inherentcognitive biases.
      • Real-world TDS usage: seethis tweet where I was accused of having it.
    • Be Bold, a Wikipedia guideline
      • Provides good advice to new editors to not be overly shy -- but still be careful -- when editing Wikipedia.
      • "Great boldness is seldom without some absurdity," asFrancis Bacon, father of the scientific method, once said (and is noted on the Be Bold page).
    • Culture jamming and the longlist of example culture jammers.
      • IncludesChurch of the SubGenius, which I encountered in the late '70s/early '80s. Always thought of it as a satirical cartoon, not aparody religion.
      • CJ page says: "Culture jams are also being integrated into the university classroom." But I wonder if there are any university-level courses on the subject? Would be a popular class.
      • Notes that "street art may be deemed culture jamming, artistic appropriation, vandalism, or even all three."
    • Fremdscham - A.k.a. "vicarious embarrassment" that is often seen as an opposite toschadenfreude.
      • Embarrassment, like other emotions, can be contagious - you can get it from observing the embarrassing actions of another person.
      • Theembarrassment article features a great "vintage family photo" ca. 1940s or 50s with a"father expressing embarrassment or dismay as his son takes a badly timed bathroom break."
        • That photowas deleted from Wikimedia Commons in Jan 2023 because the uploader didn't actually own copyright on the image.
        • It can still be viewedon Flickr here.

    • Date format by country - wouldn't it be GREAT if we could all just stick withYYYY-MM-DD?
    • Limelight - cool use of it during the American Civil War by Union forces to illuminate artillery target at night while simultaneously blinding Confederate gunners and riflemen.
    • Aristotle - has a nice compilation of quotes onWikiquote including manymisattributed ones such as the"We are what we repeatedly do." quote, which was actually a summation byWill Durant in his 1926The Story of Philosophy.
      • I was suspicious of it being a misattribution since the English seemed very clean & modern, asnoted by Caelan Huntress: "Greek doesn’t often translate so poetically into English, and never uniformly."
      • I guess it's not a major misattribution. It's just a paraphrasing of something Aristotle actually wrote:"virtues are formed in man by his doing the actions."

    Users of note

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    Alphabetical, but definitelynot an exhaustive list here. There are tons of notable Wikipedians out there. What follows is a teensy list of a few folks that just happened to catch my attention for one reason or another.


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