In this issue we highlight new resources, global developments, and, as always, a roundup of news and community items related to libraries and digital knowledge.
We're excited about several new research partnerships:
There are also expanded partnerships:
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Global branches are constantly evolving and bring potential in supporting editors who are in real need. New strategies and approaches are constantly being tried and results analysed to invigorate activities and ideally be of use to all editors on non-English branches. In this piece we will cover global highlights, news and updates for the last two months and for the time to come.
This post is excerpted from theWikimedia Blog.
It is no stretch to say that without books, Wikipedia would not exist.
The free encyclopedia relies on citations to ensure the information you find on Wikipedia is verifiable and based in reliable sources. Even in the digital age, many of the highest-quality sources are the books available in your local library.
Yet despite their importance, adding references to Wikipedia has been difficult at times, requiring at minimum a basic knowledge of wikicode. Steady improvements have been made over the years to make it easier to add citations, including through the cite tool on Wikimedia's visual editing interface. However, adding citations to books on Wikipedia is about to get a lot easier.
A new partnership between The Wikipedia Library and OCLC, a global nonprofit library cooperative, will allow editors to easily generate citations to millions of books on Wikipedia using OCLC's WorldCat—the largest database of books in the world, spanning the collections of more than 72,000 libraries.
The WorldCat database will be integrated into the cite tool so that an editor can type in an ISBN, an identifier available inside hundreds of millions of published books since the 1970s, and get back a Wikipedia-ready book citation, including authors, titles, and publishers.
A detailed step-by-step process on how to use this feature ishere. It expands upon Wikipedia's current method of citation auto-filling, which allows editors to generate a citation from a single online identifier, like a web address (URL) or digital object identifier (DOI). This partnership empowers Wikipedia editors and readers to harness the impact of full and accurate citations. With improved access to references that back up the facts, Wikipedia becomes a better, richer free knowledge resource for all.
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