MediaWiki talk:Anonnotice

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Notice

Wikipedia has three kinds of top of page messages that admins can edit:

  • MediaWiki:Anonnotice – Visible on top of all pages for not logged in users. If this message is empty then the system instead shows the sitenotice to those users. A trick is to set the anonnotice to for instance <p></p> so it doesn't display anything but still prevents the not logged in users from seeing the sitenotice.
  • MediaWiki:Sitenotice – Visible on top of all pages for all users. Anonymous users see this one too if the anonnotice is empty.
  • {{Watchlist-notice}} – Visible on top of the user watchlists.

This page was created on January 16, 2005 (one day after Wikipedia Day). It is the equivalent of MediaWiki:Sitenotice except that it shows up only for unregistered (anonymous) users. According to the developers, by either deleting this page or setting it to -, MediaWiki software will fall back to the SiteNotice. Flcelloguy (A note?) 03:45, 16 January 2006 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] Anon-only version

(copied from MediaWiki talk:Sitenotice)

Upon request, Robchurch has created a version of the sitenotice only viewable by anonymous users (ie, most of our readers; the target audience for requesting donations), at MediaWiki:Anonnotice (not yet live). I'll ask the CFO and/or board members about this, but I think one of them originally suggested the idea. So, we would be blanking this one, and putting some form of it in the anon-only version. Comments? — 0918BRIAN • 2006-01-16 02:12

  • I've read the above discussion and can't understand why. Are registered users not supposed to donate? Flcelloguy (A note?) 02:22, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
    • Well, both Jimbo and Mav have said that they don't expect editors to donate, since they already donate their time. Assuming that most of the non-editing readers are anons, this would be the best solution that would both target the largest audience while not causing an annoyance for regular editors (see any of this page for the annoyance I speak of :)). — 0918BRIAN • 2006-01-16 02:25
  • This would solve all the problems. Ambi 02:30, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
    • Not really since it means that the people inflicting inconvience on others don't experence it themselves. It also weakens our hand in our next clash with bugmenot. It also presents posible long term problems with meatpupets.Geni 02:36, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
      • Geni, since you seem to feel so strongly about these notices, what alternative approach to financing would you like to see? Dragons flight 02:41, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
        • Link more prominat in the side bar. Makeing the wikipedia logo link to the donations page rather than the main page. Looking to increase the sucess of fundraiseing drives. Getting mechendise produced by anyone other than cafepress (both pennny arcade and slahdot use thinkgeek I don't know what terms they would offer wikipedia though). There are many options.Geni 02:51, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
  • Thanks to Rob for creating the possibility of this compromise. I think showing this to non-logged in users, and keeping just the donate link in the sidebar for logged-in users, should definitely be trialed. I don't want to make a permanent decision before we've seen the financial effects of this, so it should be done as an experiment which can be reviewed after a few weeks. If the anon version is used all the time, I would still like the sitenotice to be used during actual fundraising drives since it's important for everyone to be aware of these. Please keep whatever goes in the anon version tasteful. I'd hate to see it become an over-the-top demand for money just because regular users don't have to put up with it. Angela. 02:37, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
    • Does this mean no blinking text-decoration? :) — 0918BRIAN • 2006-01-16 02:59
  • Neat! This would solve lots of problems. But I'd still like to do something with the sitenotice during fundraisers. ---mav 02:42, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
    • That would be the idea. Keep the regular sitenotice for important matters, and during fundraising events. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-01-16 02:58

Brion has added MediaWiki:Anonnotice. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-01-16 03:07

As Brian says, this is now live. During fundraisers, delete the anon. notice or set it to - - MediaWiki will fall back to MediaWiki:Sitenotice, if it exists, so you can standardise. Rob Church (talk) 03:20, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
I notice that they have the same CSS style and placement, should I understand from your comment that only one will work at a time? If so, which has precedence? Dragons flight 04:33, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
Yes. If it wasn't clear already, anonnotice is shown to anonymous users when it exists, otherwise sitenotice is shown if that exists. Logged in users see sitenotice if that exists, else nothing. Rob Church (talk) 11:33, 16 January 2006 (UTC)

Yay, this is great! Despite my criticism of this notice, and my continuing concerns that permanently asking for money is what beggars on the street do with little success and much damage to their reputation, at least this version is properly targetted. I would be keen to see the notice return here during the quarterly fundraisers. -Splashtalk 03:22, 16 January 2006 (UTC)

Yay! Everybody is happy mav

Great job, guys! Thanks! I agree with Angela, though, that this should probably be just a test at first - in my opinion, registered users would be more likely to donate than unregistered users, but I guess we'll see. I doubt this is possible, but is there a way to see (or perhaps ask?) when someone donates whether or not s/he is a registered user? Thanks! Flcelloguy (A note?) 03:41, 16 January 2006 (UTC)

I tried to modify Mediawiki:Monobook.css to avoid pushing down the entire header line with the notice, as I find that to be quite tacky. Despite tests showing it worked for IE and Netscape, my method (setting a negative bottom margin on #siteNotice) was quickly reverted by a firefox user who said it failed for him. Regardless, I would still like to talk about finding a way to not offset the header line just for the sake of the notice. Dragons flight 04:33, 16 January 2006 (UTC)


[edit] Wording


[edit] Side effect


[edit] CSS


[edit] Replaced wording

I've reworded "Your continued donations keep Wikipedia free!" to "Your continued donations help Wikipedia grow!". I think it's thoroughly inappropriate, if not downright offensive, to suggest that Wikipedia would be anything other than free if donations aren't forthcoming. --cj | talk 07:09, 1 February 2006 (UTC)

  • My suggestion is still "Thank you for your [continued donations] to Wikipedia," but I'm fine with these versions as well. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 07:31
  • You confuse the content on Wikipedia vs Wikipedia website and project itself. True, the GFDL means that that content will remain free. But lots of donations are needed to keep the website at wikipedia.org free of advertisements, going down (can't be free if you are not online), or even pay for view type solutions..22: So is it not dishonest and you should be ashamed for ascribing bad faith. All that said, I like the new wording better. --mav 12:48, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
    • It's bad faith to assume bad faith. I didn't ascribe to you any intent – I objected to what wording suggested. And again, lack of funds doesn't mean we'd – the community – consent to advertisements. --cj | talk 13:48, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
      • Your own words (replace wording - it's despicable to suggest Wikipedia would be any thing other than free.) So you were saying that what I said was inappropriate, offensive, and despicable when you could have been civil when making the change. You were incivil and should have acted btter. Shame. --mav
        • No, I criticised what the wording suggested – I made no comment as to your intent. And your accussatory comments have hardly been polite. You are neglecting to abide by the same convention you accuse me of failing.--cj | talk 08:17, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
          • You have been rude and incivil. I have merely pointed out that fact. --mav 18:08, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
      • When the site becomes extremely slow or goes down for extended periods, then the community will change its mind. This will probably happen by the end of next year, unless we get some huge donations, or Google finally comes through. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 17:25
      • Hardware for the entirity of this year is projected to cost over $3 million, while next year will be up to nearly $20 million. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 17:38
        • At some point this exponential growth in traffic (that has been going on for years) has got to saturate. It actually looked like it had started to before the whole Seigenthaler gave a big kick in exposure. If you had asked me a year ago, I would have said it would be many years before we made it into the top 10 websites, while right now it looks like it could in fact be soon. The top site on the web (Yahoo) only gets about 25 times the traffic we do right now. Since most of the capital goes into hardware to manage growth, eventually the growth should slow and we'll reach a point where most of the funding goes towards maintainence expenses, right? Dragons flight 18:08, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
          • You're assuming that we'll survive to the point where the growth even begins to level out. Even if it starts to level, we can't even raise near $3 million, let alone $20 million, or anything in between. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 18:36
          • Well there will be the background level of internet growth. However in thoery the cost of servers should fall which should counter that. Hmm where can we see these cost projections? Oh and past promisies mean that pay per view is not an option.Geni 18:50, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
            • Advertisements are inevitable, however. The cost projections are on the meta site's budget page. I checked them earlier today. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 18:36
              • http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_budget/2006/Q1 seems to be blank.Geni 19:05, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
                • [5]0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 19:52
                  • They expect that over the next two years our hits will increase by two orders of magnitude? Are they assumeing that everyone in india will be given free internet acess or something?Geni 20:03, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
                  • (edit conflict) Someone should point out to whoever is writing the budget that we probably don't need to write the 2007 budget to accomodate 6 fold more traffic than Yahoo, the present internet leader, gets today. Hence, I believe the $20M hardware budget is inflated. Dragons flight 20:04, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
                    • Of course it's not right. That's not the point. We can't even meet this year's hardware needs, let alone next year's, which will only get higher. If you have better data, let us know. Until then, it's the best we have. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 20:06
                      • Well if you don't believe it, then don't be citing it all willy-nilly like you did above. We cleared ~$320,000 in the last drive, and we are apparently budgeting for continued 85% traffic growth per quarter. If donations can be made to grow at that same 85% rate per quarter then you'd clear $3M after 4 quarters, which makes that number somewhat less scary. Do you have similar plots showing donations versus traffic? Dragons flight 20:19, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
                        • According to Mav, the increase in donations has always been slower than the increase in traffic. I don't know by how much. We'll probably come close to meeting the $3M for this year, assuming that the number isn't higher, but as I said earlier, by next year we'll probably have to do some short-term advertising in some form. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 20:50
                          • hmmm run a comparison of donations against database server hits then. If we assume that the grow rate predictions for this year are correct then growth pretty much has to crash in early 2007 which will massively reduce the budget requirements.Geni 21:34, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
                            • You're still missing the point. Yes, the requirements will drop, but they will still be higher than now, and most likely still increase much faster than donations. Simply sitting back and hoping for more donations is not going to fix this. No new predictions are going to turn $20M into something realistically achievable. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 22:51
                              • In fact they do. Zero growth would mean that server expenditure would be reduced to whatever needed to be replaced. That could quite easyerly reduce the costs by a couple of orders of magnitude. Now growth isn't going to drop to zero but I suspect that either the 2006 budget is a massive overestimate or the 2007 budget will be a lot closer to 2 million than 20.Geni 23:00, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
                                • You are not basing your predictions on any evidence though. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-1 23:15


Actually, the only projection done for 2007 is based on a model I created in October 2004. That model predicted that if we continued growing at the same rate of exponential growth as we were in the 2 years previous to that month, that we should expect to spend about 10 million dollars on hardware in 2007 (adjusted for Moors Law). However, our growth appears to be even more strongly exponential now than it was then. A more recent projection I made of PayPal donations indicates we should expect to bring in 1 to 2 million dollars per month by December of this year. So that makes the 10 million dollar figure not seem so scary. Much more systematic projections are needed and a consistent source of traffic data is also needed (the only one I can think of is Alexa ; our server logs are an inconstant mess for the time periods we need to check). Oh, and so far it does not appear that we have felt any effects of saturation of our potential Internet audience. I do imagine we will start to see some of those effects as we approach the popularity of the top five websites on the Internet. So any projection we do on current growth rate will need to be adjusted because of that. My October 2004 model did not consider saturation plateau effects. BTW, by ‘plateauing’ I mean that we would only follow the much weaker exponential growth of the Internet itself instead of our past and current insanely exponential growth. --mav 18:41, 2 February 2006 (UTC)

  • How did you arrive at this $1-2 million/month figure? Right now, we're at about $90,000 per month ($3000 per day). Even with January's successful fundraiser, we came in at just under $300k for that month. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-2 18:51
    • Via very rough analysis. :) Just input the total PayPal revenue from each month minus the current and first ones (both incomplete datasets) here into a spreadsheet program and then add exponential and logarithmic trend lines. Also note that our Q4 2004 fundraiser brought in about $50,000. We have exponential growth in donations as well as traffic. I'm less fearful now than I was previously that our traffic growth would eventually outstrip our donation growth. But much better analysis needs to be done to confirm that. -- mav


killing indent Ok lets consider the following logic:

  • At any given time there if a finite amount of traffic on the internet
  • This traffic grows at a slower rate than trafic going to wikipedia
  • There is a maxium number of hits per internet user
  • The biggest coast asscoated with servers is buying them
  • Servers have a life expectancy of more than one year.

From this we can conclude that wikipedia's growth is not sustainable at anything like it's current rate for an indefinate length of time. We can also conclude that server costs will fall then stabilise when this happens.

So the problem becomes one of modling the various fall off rates. This is tricky in that there are no websites we can usefuly compare ourselves with. Still we can make a start.

The upperbound is probably yahoo we are not realisticaly going to overtake it so if we modle the worst case in cost per quater (no slowdown untill we hit saturation point) we end up with a situation where the cost for 2006 goes down to around $6million. Remeber that is from traffic greater than yahoo so it really isn't going to happen. If we settle for half yahoo's traffic we end up with a budget of maybe $3million. That includes a million for server replacements.

Figures taken from that bit of "financial modeling"Geni 00:15, 2 February 2006 (UTC)

Actually if you think about it, what a hypothetically completed Wikipedia represents is what a substantial portion of people come to the internet for anyway. Search engines only represent a chance to find what you want, while in a "finished" Wikipedia it would be there and be comprehensive. Now we all know we're very far from that, but the point is Wikipedia could eventually outstrip Yahoo, et al if the content here continues to improve. What Wikipedia's traffic limits are is the percentage of web uses that are for seeking reference information. The one's that are for social networking, real time info such as stock quotes, etc are not Wikipedia's potential market. So I don't know what that number is, but it's a substantial portion of web traffic. Of that, what does Yahoo pull in now? I think it's not even a percent of monthly overall internet traffic. This is all pie in the sky, but the point is Wikipedia's potential traffic is well larger than what any other single sites currently have. After the rambling, I disagree with the wording change, because without funding Wikimedia won't be able to support a free Wikipedia, and free is a very powerful motivator that we need to focus in on for bringing in donations. - Taxman Talk 16:45, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
Yahoo.com has a daily reach of 296,000 per million, which is 29.6%. Wikipedia's daily reach is 35,550 or 3.56%. In other words, on a typical day, about a third of all people on the Internet visit Yahoo.com and about 3.5% visit Wikipedia. Yet Wikipedia.org is growing much faster than Yahoo.com in terms of reach. So the gap is narrowing. I agree with everything else you said. :) -- mav 18:08, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
29% visit the site according to Alexa's numbers, but those same people also visit many other sites, so Yahoo's share of overall traffic is much less than 29%. In other words the reach numbers for all web sites total many times 100% of internet users. Still I was way off on my guesses for the numbers. Then again, myspace.com has been growing as fast as Wikipedia so far. My overall above point, I stand by though. :) - Taxman Talk 18:32, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
Wikipedia completely misses out on the social and gameing side of the internet. A lot of material people want is copywriten and it would be pretty hard to create GFDL replacements (music and increasingly films). We are not the best for news which is another large chunck of traffic and we don't cover the weather.Geni 18:53, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
It helps that many of the top-ranked sites are also people's homepages, usually by the program's default (msn.com or google.com/firefox). Maybe we should try creating an equivalent page (something simpler than the Main Page)? — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-2 18:58
I don't think that is the type of traffic we want. Anyway anyone who wants wikipedia set as their home page probably already has (if only to pick up extra points in the are you addicted to wikipedia quiz).Geni 20:32, 2 February 2006 (UTC)

[edit] New wording

Since the anonnotice changed, donations have dropped by $2-3,000. Should we try a different wording? — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-5 00:33

  • How about we go back to the way it was before? People don't care as much about donating to improve the site as they do donating to keep it around at all. Help keep Wikipedia free was the most accurate and powerful message we could have. That much of a drop in donations is the only reason we need to go back. - Taxman Talk 19:24, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
    • While I do understand others' complaints about this wording, I agree that we should at least try it out to see how it affects donations. Monday (today) should have been our highest day of the week, but now it's looking more like donations are continuing to drop with the less direct wording. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-6 19:49
    • To be clear, when I referred to a $3000 drop, that was when we switched from Jimbo's personal appeal to the "grow and improve" wording. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-6 19:53
  • any way we can switch back to jimbo appeal so with can callibrate for donor fatigure?Geni 20:05, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
  • I'm fine with that too. - Taxman Talk 20:34, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
I disagree with the keep Wikipedia free wording since we'd never allow wikipedia free to become unfree and Jimbo has expressed this several times in the past. There has to be a better way to phrase this that isn't blatantly lying to the readers. JtkieferT | C | @ ---- 20:47, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
How about one of these: "help keep Wikipedia alive/going/operating/running"? It's more accurate and to-the-point than either of the versions currently being debated. Regardless of what is finally chosen, it must be something other than the current version, which is just not cutting it. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-6 20:50
You can't conclude that since you have changed more than one variable.Geni 21:28, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
What has been changed besides the wording of the notice? Let's try to be productive here. Which of my suggested alternatives are you alright with, or please make another suggestion. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-6 21:30
I honestly don't have one but stating that Wikipedia is suddenly not going to be free if you don't donate is beyond deceptive it's outright lying. It's true that Wikipedia will face a budget crunch soon and the prospects aren't good in terms of growth with this current rate of donations but you'll have a hard time convincing me that it's actually accurate to be telling people that wikipedia won't still be free if they don't donate. JtkieferT | C | @ ---- 21:47, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
Which version of this sounds alright: "help keep Wikipedia alive/going/operating/running"? — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-6 22:04
Based on the quick and totally insubmissible poll in #wikipedia, everyone who replied favored "running", so I'll go with that for now. Please reply here with suggested changes. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-6 22:12

[edit] Broken?

I noticed that all pages momentarily (for a couple of minutes) had some kind of error or pasrsing on them; that seems to be clear now. However, when viewing while not logged in, the anonnotice appears as a red link, and it goes to a "bad link" warning when clicked. This is a problem that needs to be fixed, unless it's only my computer (I've cleared my cache). Try logging out and tell me what you see. For now, though, I'm going to blank the page so that the red link doesn't appear. Feel free to revert if it's fixed already. Thanks! Flcelloguy (A note?) 02:08, 9 February 2006 (UTC)

Never mind, appears to be fixed. Probably a temporary bug. Thanks! Flcelloguy (A note?) 02:11, 9 February 2006 (UTC)

[edit] donor fatigue

Looks like it has set in. Anyone want to go and talk to the board?Geni 16:15, 12 February 2006 (UTC)

  • I wonder when Mav and Brion will implement the Donate button on the sidebar. — 0918BRIAN • 2006-02-15 01:06
Umm I've got one bottem left.Geni 08:08, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
Last we had figures average was below 1000 per day. This is likely to make the next proper fundraiseing drive difficult. Interesting alexa stats suggest that traffic to wikipedia is starting to level off.Geni 17:48, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
Yes. It's also interesting that gravity makes objects fall. Your point? — 0918BRIAN • 2006-03-23 17:54
There is a reasonable posibilty that it have a negative inpact on the next drive.Geni 19:41, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
Donations could be dropping off for many other reasons. Those could include no clear updates about current budgets including where the money from the last fundraiser has gone and/or is going, and no clear information about how much more is needed. Clarifying those now or adding them into a specific fund drive could completely change the picture. I hear no one claiming donor fatigue on the donations link on the left navigation toolbar. That's always been there. - Taxman Talk 18:45, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
Yeah but it's pretty clear that one always go ignored so is rather a non issue. in any case I don't have donation figures for when it first appeared.Geni 19:41, 23 March 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Houston, we have a problem


[edit] Correction

"Your continued donations keeps Wikipedia running! " Yonidebest 11:53, 7 May 2006 (UTC)

"Your donations" is plural, therefore it requires a plural verb. "Keep" is the conjugated plural, third-person verb. Alternately, "Your continuing to donate keeps Wikipedia running" would be correct, but it sounds a million times worse. Jude (talk) 07:05, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
What's wrong with the current one? It is indeed grammatically correct. Titoxd(?!? - help us) 07:07, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
That's what I thought, yeah. Jude (talk) 07:34, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
The current sentence structure is indeed grammatically correct. There is no reason to change it. --Siva1979Talk to me 03:37, 13 July 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Add a few nbsp;s?

Could an admin please add a couple more nbsp;s to the end of this message? That way it won't clash with the Spoken Wikipedia icon. Thanks, TheGrappler 16:57, 23 June 2006 (UTC)

Added 5 now; ALT+160 =Nichalp «Talk»= 17:45, 22 March 2007 (UTC)

[edit] It needs to be moved up or over:


[edit] After sandboxing it...

<div style="position:absolute; z-index:100; right:15px; top:40px;" class="metadata" id="donate">''<small>Your <font color="blue">[[m:Fundraising|continued donations]]</font> keep Wikipedia running!</small>''</div> ...This works wonderfully. Hope my time was productive! R | T | C • 20070418202305

{{editprotected}}

N Not done. This clashes with {{coor title dms}}, and fails on very large font sizes (it overlaps the horizontal line underneath the page's title). I'm also not convinced it would work on the Main Page (although the current version doesn't work properly there either), but it's hard to test. If you want to submit a revised version, please set your browser's font size to maximum as one of the tests you do when sandboxing; positions hard-coded in pixels normally fail under such conditions. --ais523 11:37, 20 April 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Rotate different messages daily

It is a well known fact in advertising that displays exactly the same message over and over again will eventually lead those who view that message start to ignore it. I therefore propose that we think of and figure out the best way to rotate a growing set of different messages. Also, some of these messages need not, IMO, all be modeled on a simple reminder/plea. Even some relevant quotes (esp from past donors) might be good.

Rotating messages may be possible right now by using the same template trick used to rotate Featured Articles/Selected anniversaries on the Main Page. There will likely be a cache issue but I think that will work in our favor since it may result in anons periodically seeing a different message at the top of pages the same day they visit. --mav 15:02, 5 May 2007 (UTC)

Please add your suggestions below. Anything in [brackets] indicate a link to the donation page.

[edit] Annonnotice message ideas

[edit] General

  1. [Make a donation today] to support Wikipedia!
    Help us provide free content to the world by [donating today]!
    Think Free! [Support Wikipedia]
Explanation: Paraphrase of Apple's 'Think Different' ad campaign
  1. Invest in free knowledge. [Donate to Wikipedia]!
    Help us improve Wikipedia by supporting it financially. Please [donate today]
    Help us make the Internet not suck! [Support Wikipedia].
Explanation: Paraphase of Jimmy Wales famous "We make the Internet not suck" statement.
Pros: Edgy and funny
Cons: Might be too edgy and not appropriate for younger childern.
  1. Get Wiki with it! [Donate to Wikipedia]
Cons: Outdated slang term now known only for its relation to a Will Smith song.

[edit] Donor comments

A second line in small font would give credit for comments

  1. "Wikipedia is what the Internet was intended for." Please, [donate today!]
Explanation: Paraphrase of comment by Ned Miles in the Day 1 of Q4 2005 fund drive
  1. "Wikipedia is a revolution so large it is difficult to comprehend." [Support it today]
Explanation: Comment by Louis Mackall on Day 1 of Q4 2005 fund drive
  1. "Wikipedia has saved my academic career so many times! Thank You!" Please, [donate today]
Explanation: Comment by anonymous donor on Day 1 of Q4 2005 fund drive
  1. "Wikipedia is better for my brain than 10 Frappucinos!" Please, [make a donation]
Explanation: Paraphrase of comment by anonymous donor on Day 2 of Q4 2005 fund drive
  1. "For my children." Please consider [donating today]
Explanation: Comment by Asa Canaway on Day 3 of Q4 2005 fund drive
  1. "Wikipedia gives me renewed faith in humanity." [Donate today]
Explanation: Comment by anonymous donor on Day 3 of Q4 2005 fund drive

.... More help needed on listing the best of past donor comments. See Wikimedia:Fund drives/2004/Q4, Wikimedia:Fund drives/2005 and http://fundraising.wikimedia.org/

[edit] Feedback on the idea

I think this is a great idea. :-)
James F. (talk) 14:23, 31 May 2007 (UTC)
Thanks! --mav
Here's some related discussion. I'm all for rotation. If the order of the messages is randomized, rotation should even allow for measurement of the effectiveness of the messages. Presumably we should show the more effective ones more often and vice versa.Jeremy Tobacman 08:38, 1 June 2007 (UTC)
This message is almost certain to be cached really agressively, from my experience with MediaWiki messages, which implies that it would probably need an adminbot to edit it every day and/or null edit it to update any templates that might be there. --ais523 14:20, 4 June 2007 (UTC)

I think this is a great idea.

The notice is now injected in via common.js. The notice has long been injected using javascript in order to avoid its text showing up in Google, but now that it is added via common JS we have a lot more flexibility in doing things like randomization with no worries about caching interaction. We can also adjust the link so that each different message uses a slightly different URL to reach the fundraising page, this way we could look at the logs and see which message is most effective. I'd also recommend that rather than showing a different one every day, we instead show all of them to different users and have the permutation change daily. That is, today you see message 1, I see message 2.. tomorrow I see 1 and I see 2. This will get us faster data on the messages, and it avoids the issue of some messages under-performing based on getting a bad day of the week. We could also just make the display purely random.

I propose we start with these messages:

Any support or objections to those options? I think they are mostly similar in character to the current notice, so they should be good starting points. --Gmaxwell 21:36, 2 September 2007 (UTC)

Sounds good, let's do it. It shouldn't be too hard to come up with even more variant forms of the same basic message. --Cyde Weys 22:23, 2 September 2007 (UTC)

  • I'll jump on the great idea bandwagon and say.... it's a great idea. Wizardman 22:45, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
  • Obviously couldn't hurt, but needs to stay on topic as well. Jmlk17 22:46, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
  • Yes - let's do this to get the system up and running. Fresh messages can always be added as needed later. --mav 22:59, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
Y Done Feedback anyone? —METS501 (talk) 01:21, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Probably not the feedback you expected, but I think preliminary testing should be done in one's monobook.js, not "live" in global Common.js ∴ Alex Smotrov 03:39, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
I definitely agree. But unfortunately I had tested it with GreaseMonkey, it had worked, and then when I went to add it to common.js I made a couple of superficial changes which I then made errors adding :-) Sorry. —METS501 (talk) 04:57, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Wow - seems to work really well. Is there a limit to the number of possible messages? Is it randomized? Would it be possible to track click throughs to measure the effectiveness of each message? --mav 05:58, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Yep, it's 100% random which message is displayed. I think Mindspillage is setting up some way of tracking click-throughs; I'll let her report on that though. —METS501 (talk) 06:12, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
No limit to the number of messages. We will be able to get some data on which messages are being clicked, yes. --Gmaxwell 06:38, 3 September 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Election notice is bad


[edit] "continued donations" link NOT clickable on internet explorer 6.0 :-(


[edit] Ten things you didn't know about Wikipedia


[edit] Two continued donations message?

Why are there two donations messages? The one next to the *10 things list* is interfering with the main page so that it overlaps with the portals. Both links are clickable in IE6 for me. --Hdt83 Chat 05:02, 31 August 2007 (UTC)

I would say that your browser received a mix of old and new special pages, simply pressing Ctrl-F5 to "refresh" should fix that ∴ Alex Smotrov 13:19, 31 August 2007 (UTC)
Because of the movement of the notice back to the top it's going to be doing this again today. The issue will go away on its own. --Gmaxwell 21:09, 2 September 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Clashes with not-unreasonably long titles

Such as, for instance Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform, which is not so long that it ought to need a dispensation. Advertising walking on content is <optimal. Splash - tk 23:35, 31 August 2007 (UTC)

This notice is really obnoxious. Not only does it interfere with longer than usual titles, it also interferes with userlinks at the top of user pages and items on talk pages, such as the time on Talk:Main Page. Is it really necessary to have "Your continued donations keep Wikipedia running!" two places at the top of the page? It's already above every article; it seems really unnecessary to have it to the right of every article title as well. 68.17.169.142 15:50, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
Splash's issue is a result of the anon notice being two lines long. The anonnotice should never be made two lines long because the space provided is only enough for a single line. The anonnotice was made two lines long as the result of an apparent misunderstanding. The anonnotice has been corrected.
68.17.169.142's complaint of duplicate donation requests is a result of seeing an old cached copy of the anonnotice. This is a technical artifact from our aggressive caching for anon users interacting with the movement of the donation notice back to the top and will go away in a couple of hours, or as soon as whatever page you are seeing is purged. There is no easy way for us to avoid a few hours of duplication, which is why care and consideration should be used before moving the notice off the top of the page. --Gmaxwell 20:58, 2 September 2007 (UTC)

This is not fixed. I just logged out, cleared my cache, and the text collision is a problem with long titles or narrow windows. Can we please move this down to the "From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia" line, to avoid the collision? ←BenB4 09:38, 4 September 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Random message

I like it, but does this affect caching at all? Ral315 » 07:33, 3 September 2007 (UTC)

Not at all. If it did the site would be down right now.. very very down. :) --Gmaxwell 07:58, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
The servers send all the messages to each computer (so as not to interfere with caching), and the user's computers are told to pick one at random for themselves. (Nothing appears if Javascript is off.) --ais523 14:05, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
It should also be noted that the notices are in common.js, it's loaded as a seperate object... so a user will usually only download one copy per browsing session, so this doesn't add overhead on every page load. --Gmaxwell 00:10, 4 September 2007 (UTC)

[edit] &bull?

Whats with the &bull at the end of that message? Looks like a typo where you meant to put a bullet. 71.112.225.88 08:53, 3 September 2007 (UTC)

It was a typo; I noticed it independently and fixed it. --ais523 13:59, 3 September 2007 (UTC)

[edit] This looks crap

Do we seriously need rotating messages telling people stuff they don't particularly need to know? Like "Interested in contributing to Wikipedia?". These notices have even less utility than those clickable banner ads someone set up for user pages: "Interested in the UK? Then join Wikiproject UK!"

To accommodate this gimmick, the donation beg has now been moved to the top row, above the tabs. It looks terrible, and only adds to what I call the "patchwork quilt" which the Monobook skin has become with too many people adding little things here and here.

Lastly, and probably most importantly, the two anon notices are the only parts of the Monobook skin which consistently break when you set your browser to a high text size (though not, farcically, Internet Explorer 7, which zooms very well). I only have to zoom to 170% in Opera full screen at 1024x768 for overlap to occur with the newly-positioned donation beg and the sign in link. In Firefox 2, going up 3 text sizes in a maximised window similarly causes overlap. These are not ridiculous text sizes, and are frequently used by people with poor vision to browse the internet. - Mark 12:29, 9 September 2007 (UTC)

Lets see. The donation notice was moved to the top because many people think it is better there. The addition of the reader education messages was something separate. Donations are up 50% month over month since the move of the notice moved up to the top although, of course, more data is needed yet to pin the actual cause of the donations increase. Rotation appears to also be an effective fundraising research tool: preliminary data shows the most clicked message is clicked 5-7 times more frequently than the least clicked.
The overlap didn't occur even at 3 steps size increase in firefox at the prior notice font size. We could shrink the notice back, but I'm fairly confident that we can prevent the overlap even at the current size by adjusting the page so that there is a single block element which contains the sign in button and the donation notice, so that there is a line wrap when they intersect. I need to do some testing first, however. --Gmaxwell 14:31, 9 September 2007 (UTC)
I copied this from the Wikipedia:Village Pump (technical) where I wrote it, not knowing how to find this page.
Hi, if this is not the right place to discuss these, could someone point me in the right direction. For those who spend their entire time logged into Wikipedia, and thus wont have seen these; when you view Wikipedia anonymously, two sets of links appear at the top of the page. The first, at the very top right is a subtle link to the Wikimedia donations page, which is understandable; The second is a list of Wikipedia Essays and Help Pages and it appears at the top of the article space on the left. I would like to propose the removal of these left-hand links from Wikipedia:
  • They are scruffy, aligned to a random position at the top of the title bar, in a smaller, slanted font which is hard to read.
  • They are irritating, just like Google adverts, but not even targeted, and also repetitious.
  • They are inconsistent, The two essays in the list are targeted at semi-wikiholics, whilst the four help pages are targeted at new users.
  • They are hacked in, added by Javascript in an absolutely positioned div, which unsurprisingly makes the occasional mistakes, resulting in a garbled mess.
If the consensus is that Wikipedia is improved by these links, could they please be rendered tidily and legibly, targeted at a specific audience, and dismissable. Also, a few more than seven links would make it seem as though there was a point to this exercise; just because we have the technical ability to do something like this, does not make it a good idea.Conrad.Irwin 19:58, 14 September 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Two messages vs. one

Firstly, I think it's a good idea to experiment with the ways we can use our website for messaging. A recent press report already cited the WP:10T page, for example, which I assume it is due to being featured here.

My subjective impression of the two messages is that they make pages look more cluttered and a bit amateurish. The "tip" message is also very close to the page title when it's very long.

I therefore think it would make sense to merge the two messages into one. The message above the tabs seems to be reasonably clean (though we need to make sure it doesn't overlap at low resolutions). Why not have the "tips" appear with about 10% to 20% frequency among the donation messages?

I also think merging the messages would be clever for another reason: If the donation message is always about donations and never particularly helpful, people are more likely to simply phase it out. If we occasionally show useful bits of information there, we encourage readers to keep scanning that particular part of the screen.--Eloquence* 15:08, 9 September 2007 (UTC)

That seems to be logical. The more interesting stuff they see in a space, the more likely they are going to look (and click) there in future. - Mark 16:24, 9 September 2007 (UTC)
Once I'm comfortable with the testing I've done with local data storage I was planning on introducing rotation that causes a user not to see a message again for a span of time after they've clicked on it. The same functionality could be use to avoid showing duplicate messages for users. Before we make any more changes to the donation notice I'd prefer we wait a few days so we get a full week of data on the donation click through rates... Then we'll be able to make objective decisions about the effectiveness of any particular strategy. --Gmaxwell 18:17, 9 September 2007 (UTC)
Will that rotation use cookies? ←BenB4 23:33, 14 September 2007 (UTC)
I hope not! I have set mine to reject all cookies and I don't want to have that happen. ~user:orngjce223 how am I typing? 03:19, 26 October 2007 (UTC)

[edit] <span/>

I cannot check this at the moment, but I remember that <span/> caused some page appearance issues for Opera 8, and in another project we had to replace it with <span style="display:none"></span>AlexSm 07:50, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
I checked and the <span/> does break the page for Opera 8.5 (can be downloaded at http://arc.opera.com/pub/opera/win/850/en/) in monobook skin: logo is missing, user and actions portlets on top are missing, there is a huge gap between "interaction" and "toolbox" portlets on the left. —AlexSm 14:15, 10 March 2008 (UTC)

I switched <span/> to <p></p>. Cheers. --MZMcBride (talk) 20:14, 10 March 2008 (UTC)

[edit] crowded up there

Hi,

currently there are three messages being displayed on top: Registration for Wikimania, just on top of that (and almost on the same space, for my pc a very ugly layout) " Ten things you may not know about Wikipedia " and finally all on top, on the same height as the login button, a small text about donations. Could we please get rid temporarily of the " Ten things you may not know about Wikipedia " until the Wikimania notice is gone? Right now it doesn't look too charming imho... effeietsanders 09:30, 10 May 2008 (UTC)

I've disabled the Wikimania notice for anons. --MZMcBride (talk) 23:09, 10 May 2008 (UTC)
Why? They're members of the community too...
James F. (talk) 22:32, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
Of course. But it was far too crowded with banners. I consulted with Cbrown and a few others, and after the Wikimania notice had been up for a week, I took it down for anons. Ideally, the anon tips (i.e., "Ten things," etc.) will be merged with the donation banner eventually (the beginning of June-ish) and there will be a bit more breathing room. The other issue with having the anonnotice active for long periods of time is that it causes serious issues with page layout. Icons are pushed down, text overlaps, etc. If you strongly feel that anons should see the notice again, feel free to simply blank the MediaWiki message (that will cause the sitenotice to be shown to everyone). --MZMcBride (talk) 20:24, 17 May 2008 (UTC)