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Jrbray



I am copying in information from my website www.forts.org.uk. Please don't nag me about copyright issues for text from that source. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Fort_Charlotte ----- Hi, please don't delete wikilinks between pages, many of the links you deleted were extremely relevant to the article (e.g. ice age and glacier in the Solent article, and ornithology in Isle of Portland) or wikipedia standard (e.g. dates, unites of measurement). --User:Steinsky 23:42, 3 Oct 2004 (UTC) ---- Those terms are in such common usage that it makes no sense to mention them in an article. Over-linking means the article becomes unreadable with link underscores/colours, until you are forced to switch off the differentiation, which them obscures the useful links. Linking every noun badly impairs readabilty, and if people wonder what a glacier is, or what a mile is, they can look it up in a seperate window. Perhaps Wikipedia will define an importance or common usage scale for links, defineable as a user preference, so we can get our different views of the same page automatically. Until then, be wary of over definition. :You may be familiar with them, but most people do not know the details of how glaciers produce landforms such as the solent. The link was to a page describing the processes that created the solent, not a link to a dictionary definition of 'glacier'. --User:Steinsky 14:07, 8 Oct 2004 (UTC) ---- All these links are to generic terms, not specialised articles relevant to this place. Do you really think people reading about the Solent come across the link 'sea' and think, 'I wonder what this strange thing a sea is, I must investigate further', and click on the link? BTW it wasn't glaciers but ice-sheets melting, there is a big difference. And the flooding of the South coast rheas was caused by isostatic uplift. Now that is an uncommon technical term which a link would illuminate. All this smacks of the early days of DTP, where everyone used huge numbers of fonts because they could, rather than considering what was useful. I seem to be supprted by the links section of the Manual of Style ==Amstrong cannon== I have added a photo to the article Rifled Breech Loader of a cannon I found in a fort near Bangkok, Thailand. However the cannon was labeled "Armstrong cannon", and it took me quite some time to make the connection between the two names. Can you verify that I guessed correctly, and an "Armstrong cannon" is really the Rifled Breech Loader? I have made a redirect Armstrong cannon. User:Ahoerstemeier 12:06, 3 Feb 2005 (UTC) That is indeed a rifled breach loading gun , but of a special type called a 'disappearing gun', where the recoil of the shot lowers the gun into the loading position you see, safe behind the parapet. Its specialised nature does not make it an ideal example. William Armstrong was an industrialist who produced a wide range of gun designs, so it is likely to be one of his, but I'm not enough of an expert to say more. Jrbray

Jrbray



I am interested im miltary history and am moving content from Fortress UK (http://www.forts.org.uk) onto Wikipedia. I dislike the over zealous linking that goes on in Wikipedia, where some people feel that every noun must be a link, as it clutters the entries with words in common use that don't expand on the subject of the article.


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J

JA | JB | JC | JD | JE | JF | JG | JH | JI | JK | JL | JM | JN | JO | JP | JR | JS | JT | JU | JW | JX | JY | JZ |

Words begining with Jrbray:

Jrbray
Jrbray


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