Welcome to Citizendium: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Larry Sanger
No edit summary
imported>Larry Sanger
No edit summary
Line 62: Line 62:


=== Important new community pages ===
=== Important new community pages ===
* [http://www.watchknow.org WatchKnow] will be a free, non-profit, K-12 educational video contest, currently under planning and development.  [http://columbus.craigslist.org/eng/713663956.html We're hiring.]
* [[CZ:Myths and Facts|Myths and Facts]]: we might be different than you think!
* [[CZ:Myths and Facts|Myths and Facts]]: we might be different than you think!
* We are organizing '''[[CZ:Workgroup Weeks|Workgroup Weeks]]'''--our biggest initiative yet.  Citizens, get involved, and watch our numbers multiply!
* We are organizing '''[[CZ:Workgroup Weeks|Workgroup Weeks]]'''--our biggest initiative yet.  Citizens, get involved, and watch our numbers multiply!

Revision as of 08:47, 18 June 2008

Logo400grbeta small.png
Natural Sciences       Social Sciences       Humanities
Arts       Applied Arts and
Sciences
      
Recreation

A new wiki encyclopedia project—and more!

  • We aim at reliability and quality, not just quantity.
  • We welcome participation from everyone knowledgeable, broadly or narrowly, about any of the world's innumerable subjects— in some cases, writers may be gently guided by experts.
  • We write under our real names—and are both collegial and congenial.
  • We now have [[:Category:CZ Live|Template:Articles number+ articles]] and are gathering speed.
  • Eduzendium participants write for academic credit.

Write for the Citizendium—knowledge is fun!

  • Sign up—we need both authors and editors (you might be both!)
  • Then, get a quick start.
  • Remember, we are an open, young project—it's easy to get involved!

Learn about us

Important new community pages

  • WatchKnow will be a free, non-profit, K-12 educational video contest, currently under planning and development. We're hiring.
  • Myths and Facts: we might be different than you think!
  • We are organizing Workgroup Weeks--our biggest initiative yet. Citizens, get involved, and watch our numbers multiply!

Support us

 

(CC) Photo: Tanya Puntti
Each sentence you add is another drop in an expanding sea of words.

Some of our finest [ about ]

Approved.png
Share your knowledge. It's a way to achieve immortality.

Often attributed to the Dalai Lama

Article of the Week [ about ]

The Crystal Palace in Hyde Park, 1851 (photographer unknown)

The Crystal Palace was a glass and iron structure built to house the Great Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations in Hyde Park, London, in 1851. After the Exhibition, it was moved and expanded and rebuilt on Sydenham Hill overlooking London, where it enjoyed a second life from 1854 until a horrific fire destroyed it in 1936.

The Crystal Palace is a significant structure in many ways: it was the first structure of its size assembled from prefabricated parts; its system of horizontal trusses has since become one of the most widely-used construction methods in the world; it was at the time the world's largest enclosed open-air structure; and its success inspired the building of similar structures around the world, from the New York Crystal Palace in New York City to the Kibble Palace in Glasgow. It also symbolizes technological prowess and imperial power of enormous historical and cultural significance. In its second incarnation in Sydenham as a suburban pleasure palace it drew crowds away from the central metropolis and was also a concert hall, famous for its performances of Handel with a massed orchestra, choir, and the Palace's enormous organ; a recording of such a performance in 1888 is the earliest known recording of live music in existence. Its exterior park, with fountains, terraces, and an outdoor exhibition of life-size dinosaur sculptures, was also highly influential. It also housed, from 1933 to 1936, the experimental studios of the Baird television company, which made regular short-wave broadcasts from its South Tower.[more...]


New Draft of the Week [ about ]

Hirohito (裕仁) or the Showa Emperor (昭和天皇 Shoowa Tennoo, 1901-1989) was the 124th emperor of Japan, 1926-89, and had the longest reign. He was the symbolic leader of his nation through prosperity (1926-29), the Great Depression (1929-41), victory and defeat in World War II (1941-45), the American Occupation (1945-50), and the rapid recovery of Japan to become an economic superpower (1950-86).[more...]