User:Peter Chastain

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


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My real name is Peter Chastain. Welcome to my user page.

About me

Committed identity: 3caf0d9e6b1ef23d2f0e9477fc9fe37bebb3a94d is a SHA-1 commitment to this user's real-life identity.

I became a Wikipedia editor in 2006. Having recently moved into Lake County, Oregon, I am interested in improving Wikipedia information about eastern Oregon. Other interests include, but are not limited to, the sciences, foreign languages, and Judaism. I enjoy nitpicking text to improve its grammar, structure, and clarity, so most of my editing activity here involves cleaning up, rather than creating original content. To a much lesser extent, I contribute to Spanish Wikipedia and to Wikivoyage, with a tiny forays into other Wikimedia projects. On some Friday nights, I attend services at my shul, and I occasionally go hiking and camping with an LGBT activity section of the Sierra Club.

Currently, I am trying to organize a Wikipedia Loves Libraries event in Lakeview, Oregon.

In

UC Davis. Then I got interested in psychology and went for a MA in psychology at San Jose State University (SJSU), before finally settling into computer programming. However, a favorite activity, on or off the job, has been to point people to where they can find answers to their questions. I love being a reference librarian, though I have never been employed as one. It seems to me that helping people find answers is what Wikipedia is all about. I also enjoy recommending books and have written a few Amazon book reviews[dead link
].

Until 2012, I was enrolled at SJSU in a second-baccalaureate program. Not actually intending to get another degree, I was using the Over 60 program at California state universities to take classes (science, foreign languages, history) for $5/semester. Having paid lots of California income tax for most of my life, I had a clear conscience. But eventually the university expressed an official opinion that I had been taking classes for personal enrichment, and I was unceremoniously dropped from the program. It was nice while it lasted, and I am moving on to other learning opportunities. I will be a student until I die.

Conflict-of-interest disclosures

Some useful links

Patrolling and assessment

Links to pages that are useful to Wikipedia editors

Links to my stuff

To see my user pages for non-English versions of Wikipedia, click the links under Languages in the navigation section of this page.

I have a sandbox, for experimentation, and have created a few sub-pages to organize some ideas that could conceivably be useful in articles that I think should be written. Feel free to make comments and add information there. I would appreciate it if you would use four tildes to sign your comments.

Links to Wikipedia administrative stuff

Some useless, but fun, links

Favorite templates

I don't really have any favorite templates, but here are some that I like, for easy reference in case I forget their names:

  • Wikipedia:Template messages/User talk namespace
    has links to a lot of messages for user talk pages.
  • Wikipedia:Template messages#Article-related namespace
    points to templates that are used for tagging articles with problems.
  • {{Welcomespam}}
  • The
    User Warnings project
    indirectly points to some good templates.
  • nikkud
    .

Special:ExpandTemplates is handy for customizing template messages.

Graphics for do-it-yourself user messages

Sometimes canned template messages are not exactly what is needed. Here is some wiki-markup that can be pasted into a custom message to produce the indicated graphics:

  • [[File:Information.svg|25px|alt=|link=]] produces
  • [[File:Ambox warning pn.svg|25px|alt=|link=]] produces
  • [[Image:Stop hand nuvola.svg|30px|alt=|link=]] produces

Tools

  • Wikiblame is supposedly useful for searching past versions of an article.
  • Listen to Wikipedia,a site showing recent updates to Wikipedia, accompanied by some very cool music. (Thanks to
    Flyer22
    for the link.)
  • REFLINKS
    - automated bulk reference fixing

On my soapbox: a plea for rigor

I find Wikipedia a useful tool for educating myself, because the information here is usually correct, especially in its main points and in areas where there is no serious disagreement. However, in discussions with friends, I sometimes hear that Wikipedia is inaccurate. Both of these perceptions are valid. As an editor, I want to take pride in getting it right all of the time. That is why it is important that we cite good references. When I search the web for corroboration, I sometimes find incorrect information in articles that seem to have been copied from Wikipedia. We say it, because they say it, because we say it.

I look for references on the web, because doing so is easy and cheap, but there are times when we need to spend some extra effort looking for an authoritative information source or going to the library or even spending some money on non-free content. If Wikipedia is worth doing (and I firmly believe that it is!), then it is worth doing right.

User pages I like

Occasionally I come across a user page with some information or solution to a problem that I have wondered how to solve. I list some of those pages here, for mostly for my own future reference:

My user boxes