There are now over 11,000 Wikia communities, with over a million articles published, in over 100 languages. Many of the volunteer members work on two or more Wikia sites. Staff are mainly in the United States and Poland.
Wikis allow anyone to write what they like and to comment on, and improve, others' work. The Wikia software is a version of MediaWiki, practically the same as used on ten million Wikipedia articles, and therefore has had so many thousands of intelligent people working on it that it is very easy to use for ordinary text, images, and lots of clever tables and charts.
(Growth chart copyright "Jimbo", licensed under GFDL and CC; original with details at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wikia_chart.03.PNG)
Wikipedia background
Wikia (formerly Wikicities) is a free web hosting service for wikis (or wiki farm) which targets communities, both those established offline and those with a purely online following. It is free of charge for readers and editors, deriving its income from advertising, and publishes all user-provided text under copyleft licenses.
Wikia hosts several thousand wikis using the wiki software MediaWiki. Its operator, Wikia, Inc., is a for-profit Delaware company founded in late 2004 by Jimmy Wales and Angela Beesley?respectively Chairman Emeritus and Advisory Board chair of the Wikimedia Foundation?and headed by Gil Penchina.
Familiarity with Wikia?
Genealogy
Cooperative software brings families together
The wiki concept is excellent for a potentially cooperative hobby such as genealogy (family history). Familypedia, the Genealogy Wiki, can help you to:
Record in black and white (or multicolor) your family's reminiscences and hard facts about your ancestors and your famous or infamous or ordinary distant cousins;
Link to their times and places so that you can appreciate how they lived and maybe why they travelled or worked or played the way they did;
Talk (on the purpose-made "talk" pages) to fellow-researchers about the best ways of displaying your data;
Find where to look for more old records;
And maybe find that someone else has already written about your relatives, making it even easier for you to get a complete picture.
Now the use of Semantic MediaWiki is making inline queries and other searches more comprehensive.
What users need
Next to nothing!
Papers about relatives, such as marriage certificates, newspaper clippings, letters, photos.
A few minutes to learn the basic editing skills. A few hours to pick up lots of cleverer tricks along the way. There are plenty of help pages and friendly fellow-contributors
Starting to use Familypedia
Find, click, type, click!
Create an account. Not compulsory, but it is free, it takes only a minute, it actually gives you more chance to be anonymous if you wish (because your IP number is hidden), and it will get other contributors helping you. The managers hate spam more than you do, so they will not tell anyone else your email address.
Next steps
Find and click the "Help" link, probably near top left. That gives you an overview of the built-in help that the site offers. Any more questions? Someone on the Wikia is sure to be able to help you (though possibly not to break down your genealogy brick wall!). Check the help desk. (It's under "Forums").
Hit the "Simple page for person" link. The target page offers you a very quick option for making a page about an individual.
For pages about several related individuals, or writing about surnames or places, there are templates that take another minute or two of thought but make it all fairly easy and link together seamlessly with better results the further you go.
The use of Semantic MediaWiki further improves pages with inline queries and other informative displays.
(Screenshot Image - a typical page for an individual - from Familypedia, license GFDL, here under "Fair use" to illustrate the site)
Other genealogy wikis
Which genealogy wiki?
Reader Feedback
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- poddys poddys Jun 28, 2009 @ 9:12 pm
- Very nice lens, I will have to look into this. 5*****
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- tdove tdove Apr 22, 2009 @ 6:36 pm
- Thanks for joining G Rated Lense Factory!
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- dc64 dc64 Apr 18, 2009 @ 9:40 am
- I've never heard of this Wiki branch for genealogy, I'm off to check it out.
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- anthropos anthropos Apr 5, 2009 @ 7:10 pm
- Interesting lens. Keep up the good work.
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