t00fri wrote:chris wrote:@Christian:
The aspect of "usefulness" in case of Wikipedia is NOT the crucial issue here. I also might use Wiki to get some further ideas where to look... But Wiki with it's intrinsic anonymous authorship CANNOT be a scientifically valid reference.
Here I disagree: usefulness is very much the point. And while I wouldn't cite a Wikipedia article as a reference in a scientific paper, I don't see a problem with offering the interested
I thought we have meanwhile reached in Celestia a consistent
culture of scientific level citation of our data. I also thought that Celestia is meant to largely be conceived as a
scientific level visualization....
You will destroy the good reputation of Celestia by referencing Wiki, about which scientists are laughing openly. I assure you this is true! The reason is NOT so much that Wiki might contain nonsense, but that it's authors remain anonymous,
despite complex and offen controversal subjects being treated!
I don't buy this argument at all. No one seems to be laughing openly about the fact that Microsoft's World Wide Telescope links to Wikipedia (as well as SIMBAD).
Who asserts the correctness of what we are referring to??
Do whatever you like. But once Wiki appears as a default Celestia reference, I cannot go along with it. Sorry.
There simply doesn't seem to be a lot of competition: when it comes to solar system bodies, Wikipedia has more breadth and detail than any other free online source that I'm aware of.
Yes, may be, but WHO stands up with his reputation that all this "breadth and detail" is CORRECT?? Apparently you don't care...
I do care, but I'm also a pragmatist who wants the solution that best serve the users of Celestia. I'm completely aware of the shortcomings of Wikipedia, but please compare:
Here's where Celestia's selecting the default info link will show you now:
http://www.nineplanets.org/enceladus.htmlCompare that to Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enceladus_(moon) With all respect to Bill Arnett for his work on the Nine Planets site, the Wikipedia page is simply much better: there's more information, it's more current, and it's full of references. Curious about the source of the 498km figure given for the radius of Enceladus on nineplanets? You're out of luck... On the Wikipedia page, the listed dimensions of 513.2?502.8?496.6 km are followed by a reference to a publication from the 37th Annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. Despite this, you'd still prefer to stick with nineplanets? I understand your discomfort with Wikipedia's open editing process, but surely this is a case where the overwhelming quality of the Wikipedia page over another our current source renders your philosophical objections moot.
Let's look at some others....
http://www.solarviews.com/eng/enceladus.htmDecent site, but full of ads. Also, the content of the page is primarily a list of nice Cassini images with descriptions. No references.
http://www.planetary.org/explore/topics ... ladus.htmlThe Planetary Society's page on Enceladus. Nice layout, nearly ad-free, but very limited information.
http://www.daviddarling.info/encycloped ... ladus.htmlThe Internet Encyclopedia of Science. Limited information, ads, no references.
NASA's World Book doesn't have an article about Enceladus at all yet. (Also, its article on Saturn seems to have no images or references more recent than 2004.)
But maybe there's something better lurking out there? I'd love to know about it if there is.
--Chris