 Good morning, San Francisco. Good afternoon, New York. Good evening Berlin and good evening Tokyo This is the Wikimedia monthly activities meeting for the month of May I am James Hare the associate product manager on the technical engagement and scoring platform teams. Let's get started In today's meeting we will be sharing a movement update including updates on structured data on commons including the first GLAM pilot projects as well as some updates on the wiki data info box on commons the wikimedia 2030 status update questions and discussions and wiki love But first our movement update Some big headlines right now we have we've petitioned the European Court of Human Rights to lift the block on Wikipedia and Turkey which I understand is not something we do every day So this is particularly big news so big round of applause to our cross departmental team that made this happen and with Wikipedia in the classroom a former student has become the teacher This is very exciting it shows that when we invest in our leaders they in turn become leaders to other people and so I think that is worth celebrating as well And just with and just as with our petition in Turkey we've also requested the government of China to unblock us I am seeing a pattern here but again thank you to the foundation for their work in making sure that billions of people around the world can actually read our website And in case you didn't know media wiki is the software that underpins Wikipedia there was recently a conference about it in California about dedicated to Basically all the people throughout the world who use the media wiki software and is very inspiring The Wikimedia Foundation published its 10th transparency report and Wikimedia Argentina and the National University of La Plata partner to promote free knowledge A round of applause for all these wonderful efforts And coming up we have the Wikimedia polling conference and that will be just coming up in a week or so I think We have Wikimedia 2019 in Stockholm and we also have the wiki convention Franco phone in Brussels And now I will bring and now let's take this over to Sandra who will be talking about structured data on comments Yes hello everyone can everyone hear me well Yes I assume you do okay so I'm going to give a very quick update to be very clear this is a work in progress update We don't really have a very finished product to show yet, but we want to update everyone listening to this to this broadcast about the current status Of things emphasis will be on pilot projects that are running full force at this moment glam pilot projects collaboration projects with the cultural sector and with volunteers working on cultural projects And actually five minutes of this slot will be given to Florence Florence they who are user on third of you know quite famous on our projects I would say Who is going to talk about one specific glam pilot project that I'm quite proud of and very happy to present the ISA tool and you will hear about that in a few minutes Next slide please But first I'm going to give a quick update on structured data on comments for those who are not following the project very closely In the past two years and this year quite actively a team at Wikimedia Foundation and Wikimedia Deutschland is working quite hard to add structured multilingual and machine readable machine readable metadata to comments from Wikidata something that the communities have been asking for quite for a quite long time time it's finally happening And we're doing that to make comments files easier to view search, edit, organize and reuse next slide please So for those people who are using comments actively and who are uploading files there you might have noticed already that you can do a few new things there at this moment You can add multilingual file captions you can translate file captions there and you can add depict statements through the file pages themselves through upload wizard and if you are so inclined through the API as well Next slide please So if you look for example at this featured image showing a very beautiful lightning strike in a pine tree I think Next slide please and if you would go to its file page as you see it there you will see a new feature or a new aspect in the user interface that wasn't there before A structured data tab next slide please Brand new and clicking on both parts of the tab under file information you can add the file captions and translate captions feel free to do so And under structured data you see that you can add all kinds of tags that are in fact things that are depicted in the image depict statements that are actually Concepts from Wikidata so we are actually proactively integrating Wikidata into comments at this moment Next slide please You can also search already for them at this moment still through a bit of a wieldy I say I would say code like kind of writing but in next iterations that will it will also become possible to search comments multilingual in this way Next slide please So just a quick overview of new features that are coming so as I said to you will be able to search comments multilingual Other statements will be added so you will also be able to say other things about files than just the things that they depict You will be able to say who created them other specific kind of data you want to add about them Quite a few other things and at this moment the team is also preparing upload wizard for campaigns Wikilev campaigns for instance Next slide please My own work I work in the Glam team at the foundation is I mentor a set of Glam pilot projects so pilot projects with cultural content Both content partnerships uploads from culture institutions but also community initiatives that are Glam focused and a few tools and prototypes Next slide please for a quick overview of what kind of projects we're looking at So in terms of content partnerships we have at this moment in preparation quite a diverse set of potential uploads to comments Both from an art museum, one related to decorative arts, one related to maps which is a kind of special material One from an encyclopedic museum actually the Met Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York is going to run a pilot with us And then we also have some community initiatives running, there will be an upload of digitized books in Punjabi Two comments to be transcribed to Wikisource to experiment with depth interchange And then coming up also quite soon, we also have some tools that are being built on top of Wikimedia comments that are about making comments quite easy to contribute to by anyone Next slide please This is just the credits, next slide please And now with all pleasure I give the words to Florence because she will dive more deeply into one of the pilot projects the ISA tool Up to you Florence Hello everyone, so I'm very happy to present you today the ISA tool, can you show me the next slide please All right, so ISA, it's a work under development What it is meant to be is a tool to help Sandra and the structured data team on comments to actually contribute content That's what we call the micro-contribution tool, it will work both on desktop and laptop and mobile But the idea is really to make it mobile friendly So next slide please I'd like to give a little bit of context of why we decided to work on that tool Most of you already know that we have been running Wikilevus Africa for now five years We have a brand new parser that you will actually see at Wikimedia in Sweden in a few months And it's summarized the contribution we have oversee for five years now with contribution from over 23 countries Last year we were discussing with Sandra at Wikimedia the outcome of Wikilevus Africa And the conclusion was one of the issues we noticed is that very few description and of course no structured data was available For over 48,000 images submitted during the last five years So please next slide So with Sandra we discussed a new tool that would be provided as part of the structured data on comments projects It was discussed last summer, we finalized the team during winter So they are at the moment two people involved from Wikimedia in Africa Association So that's Ila and myself, there are two people involved as part of the Istropedia that's shown And Navino that you already know from the Istropedia timeline Eugene is the main developer working on that project And of course we have Sandra as our mentor So the project has been at the work for the past months or two months or so We mostly work using fabricators, you can track some of our work over there And the tools will be hosted on tools.vmflabs of course On the right hand side this is not the final tool because it's still a mock-up So you have a mock-up from the main page And on the next slide please Here a mock-up for the main campaign directory So let me give you just a little bit of input of what we intend to do The tool is meant to be useful for project leaders We're all going to pre-define set of images on comments and define campaigns So for example a campaign might be let's improve the structured data About images from Wikileaks Africa in Nigeria in 2016 for example So the leader will define which categories on Wikimedia Commons will be proposed For improvements and on the mobile tool there will be the list of all campaigns available Then this person will make a call to contributors In a very traditional type of way you will have to be logged in to work on the project And the leader will also have some leaders and everyone actually will have full statistics available on desktop And some of them will be available from download Next slide please On this slide you will see the typical campaign proposed by a project leader It will be very simply defined with a beginning time, an ending time, the category of images to work on And we will work only on two different type of structured data which are depict and caption Then the project leader will send invitation directly for this campaign Next slide please And this is the typical screen of the input participation screen It will display images from the category selected, one image after the other It will also display some information directly collected from Wikimedia Commons In particular the file, the description, the categories so that it helps the user to actually look at the information And then choose to add depicts and caption information below Then it will very simply be able to save this modification or cancel go to next image At the end of the campaign information will be collected over time Information will be collected over time with points so that it's seen as a bit of a context So for example each contributors will have points attributed to the number of images he modified And we will be able to see how many people contributed for each campaign Which were the biggest contributors and how many images were improved during the campaign So next slide please So I'd like to insist that the tool is under development at the moment The ISA word means information structure to acceleration But it's also an African word from the Shishona language, it means put or place The tool we hope will be available probably during summer Will it be before Wikimedia, after Wikimedia, we don't know yet, it will depend But what we know is that we will present the tool anyway during Wikimedia And we will also hold a small campaign which is currently called metadata week But note that this is a working name, so the idea will be to make an open call during one or two weeks For people to improve information related to Wikilovs Africa images Next slide please And finally how can you help, that's a very important element So first there is a page that has been open on commons, that's commons ISA tool Please go there, put it in your watch list and help us describe the tool Improve the tool, improve the help page and set up the metadata weeks Test the tool, it's probably too early on but if you're interested in helping us to test the tool Please drop me a word, I will be following up with you Participate to the metadata week, so probably during summer There's also an issue related to translating the interface because it's very important for us that this tool is available in as many languages as possible And of course African languages as well So there will be instructions published very soon to help on the translation of the interface And finally for this summer we will do a basic first version of the tool But of course there will be a bunch of improvements to bring And we invite you to actually volunteer to help There will be probably a collection of tasks proposed during Wikimedia Hackathon So if you're interested stay tuned please, get in touch with us and track us on fabricator Essentially that's it, I thank you very much Great presentation, thank you and for our next presentation we will be learning about the Wikidata info box on Commons So take it away Mike Hi, so I'm a volunteer on the project, I guess quite a few of you know me already This has been a project I've been working on over the last year or so as a volunteer So if you've gone to Wikimedia Commons recently, anytime in the last year or so And have a look in the Commons category, you'll probably see an info box in the category now If you go to the next slide please It'll look something like this one on the right So it gives you basically the information about the category So it's the name of the thing and an image of it and kind of a summary of what the category is covering The info box is completely multilingual and it's a single info box that works for everything So it's very easy to apply to Commons, you just have Wikidata info box in the Wikidex for every category And that shows the info box This is all information drawn from Wikidata So it uses a whole load of properties to try to display the information in a nice way If you go to the next slide So as well as the basic information about it, it also shows a map It's a multilingual map where that's possible And also includes the authority control information and a whole bunch of useful links at the bottom To some of Manus' useful tools Amongst all this It also does automatic categorization So for categories about people, it will automatically add the birth and death date categories And also awards everyone and things like that It also embeds information into the category So I think the multilingual search for categories at least should already work So it pulls all the labels from Wikidata and puts those into the source for category And I think that's picked up by the search engine If you go to the next slide please So it's had very wide support from the Commons community Unlike other places where Wikidata info boxes have been a bit more resistant to I think part of the reason for that is it's completely multilingual And that's not something you can easily do in playing Wikidex There's a very active engagement to improving it If you go to the talk page for the info box Then there's constantly new ideas being suggested And additions being made to the info box to adjust and to expand it And one thing I should say is a particular thanks to userXS Who has written the Lua code that the info box uses Although most of it's written in Wikitext Next slide please One side effect is that interwiki links for Commons have dramatically improved So the reason for that is the info box uses a common side link To find which Wikidata entry to show the information from And it's been a huge project to add those side links Because mostly they didn't exist until 2018 or so So we've added well over a million side links to Commons And that has the dual benefits of on the Wikidias You get the common side link a lot more often And also on Commons you get links back to Wikipedia as well And the info box also shows some of these links in the relevant language Next slide please So on the down side there's a lot of cleanup to do So a lot of these side links didn't really It wasn't very easy to check them So there's some which are bad side links need to be cleaned up There's a property for Commons category as well on Wikidata P373 And there's a lot of duplication with that and a lot of differences that need to be resolved I think the main problem is that Wikidata needs expanding So people need to add more information to it to show up in the info boxes So for lesser known items and things on Commons Then you don't get much information in the info box But hopefully the info box will encourage people to add it The server load probably increased with the info box I was quite glad that it didn't fade Commons when it was being rolled out last year But I think it probably does use a bit more CPU time nowadays One thing I'm not sure about is whether Google and other search engines actually access information And use that to index Commons It would be quite nice if they did to increase the visibility of Commons, particularly multilingualy Some of the info boxes do get quite demonstrated on the right But they are useful information and they are tucked out of the way on the side of the category So they shouldn't get in the way of browsing the information As in photos in the category Next slide please It also works on Wikipedia The English Wikipedia is always an interesting challenge But it is set up there and does work there at the moment Although if you try to use it, it will come along and undo the edit shortly afterwards It could easily be installed on smaller wikis Those that want just a universal info box that works for every single topic in that language It's a bit of a fast to install but it's not too bad If you know anyone that's interested in having it on their wiki They're going to be interested in helping them set it up there Another kind of side project is that common side links from the English Wikipedia Are being synced up at the moment So there's a lot of clean up that can be done with that To sort out redirect links to category redirects And erroneous links and things like that And also I'm hoping that we can switch the Commons links on Wikipedia And the English Wikipedia to be completely wikidata So that's the point at the moment Next slide please So some of the next steps There's just over 2.275 million categories now have the info box There's about 6 or 7 million categories on Commons So there's quite a few more to go So we're trying to add links to match those up There's ongoing maintenance to improve the info box I just said linking new categories There's also a possibility of auto creating new wikidata entries For things that have Commons categories Tried that with people earlier this year There's some resistance so far with that idea There's questions about whether Commons categories are notable The subjects of all Commons categories are notable or not There's ongoing discussion I guess Next slide please So some things that you can do to help There's a wikidata game that lets you link Commons categories to wikidata and Wikipedia Which you can access through the Distributor game or the Manusas tools Go and have a look at your favourite Commons category And see whether it has an info box If it has a Wikipedia article and no info box Then you can add the site link in And a bot will come along and automatically add the wikidata info box to Commons later on One of the things I'm hoping for future steps is So with structured data on Commons There's all these depict statements being added to file pages The info box could access that information as well And show relevant information multilingual again in the file pages But at the moment there's no Lua access or bot access to the depicts information So for developers if that's something you might be interested in sorting out It would be nice to have in the future And that's everything I've got so thanks very much for listening And now we have our wikimedia 2030 status update Thanks everyone can you hear me? Yes Great, next slide please So hi everyone my name is Kelsey Steinrao And I'm the community relations specialist for the movement strategy core team I'm really excited to talk to you today with my colleague Rupika Sharma Who is our strategy liaison for the Hindi community And today our focus is going to be talking about community conversations Which is the area of movement strategy that I manage And as everyone here knows Who's been involved in the strategy process so far What we're trying to do with the 2030 movement strategy Is to figure out who we are as a movement Who we want to be and what our future should look like Next slide please In order to do that Your voice matters in shaping our future And it's really important that all sectors of the community Have the opportunity and feel invited to make sure that their ideas And thoughts are considered in shaping our future So there's a few different reasons why we're working so hard To give opportunities for community members from all over the world To have their voices heard And that everyone is really around content In order to have excellent recommendations about what our future should look like We need a diverse array of perspectives So that these recommendations best represent our movement And what our shared future should be The second reason is that community member voices, your voices Are essential to making sure that this process fits our values We need to be diverse We need to be inclusive, participatory, transparent and bold That's who we are as Wikimedians And that needs to transfer into every aspect of what we do around our future Next slide please The best way to do that is through the community conversations processes So community conversations are the aspect of the movement strategy process That brings community perspectives into the work of our nine thematic working groups For community conversations at high level We're operating with two broad phases The first one is enrichment and the second one is recommendations Right now in the enrichment phase What we're focused on doing is soliciting and facilitating community input On all nine of the thematic areas at whatever level of depth Or whatever scoping questions from the scoping documents People are interested in with the goal of shaping the ideas And general content of the working groups Later in this year when working groups release draft recommendations Community members will then be asked to give feedback on their proposed ideas And there's a lot of different ways that you can get involved and participate We're trying to reach people across all languages All areas of volunteer interest All geographies and levels of experience in Wikimedia And we're also active on a large variety of channels There's conversations that are happening on Wiki On social media platforms, over conference calls, and also in person Next slide please Our real on the ground leaders, the heroes in community conversations Are our strategy liaisons There's two types of strategy liaisons that we work with The first are volunteer strategy liaisons And they represent each one of our affiliates And their role is to facilitate discussions within affiliate groups And their members about movement strategy topics The second group of strategy liaisons is a hired team of seven contractors That lead community conversations across seven different language groups And there's a few different tasks that strategy liaisons do The first one, which I've already talked about Is their discussion facilitators within their community But they're also ambassadors on behalf of the movement strategy process They help our various communities and affiliates understand What movement strategy is about, why it's relevant to them Why their voices are so important and what we're doing And to do a little bit of understanding and breakdown Of the strategy topics to make it a little bit more accessible And offer people a meaningful on ramp The last thing that strategy liaisons do is They then take the feedback from the affiliates And from our broad language communities And they feed them into the efforts of the working groups So that there's that content bridge between the two areas of the strategy process Next slide please I wanted to give you all a very quick overview Of what our calendar looks like for community conversations So the period of April, May and June Is what I referenced earlier as our period of engagement For open conversations across affiliates and communities We're also shortly going to be coming out with a community survey In a number of languages that people can participate in As we move into the summer, we're going to start shifting from Broad and collectively structured community conversations And strategy salons Strategy salons are a small grant process that I manage That provides amounts between $500 and $1,500 to affiliates all over the world To host in-person conversations usually over dinner or a meal On one or two strategy topics with the members of their local community These were done as part of the strategy process in 2017 And they're a really great opportunity for inclusion, relationship building And topical deep dive within a community Then as we move into September and October And we start to receive various forms of draft recommendations From the working groups It will be opened back up again with strategy liaisons Soliciting feedback on those recommendations Next slide please For those of you wondering so how does the feedback from the communities Get into the working groups? Well don't worry there's a report on meta about it And what I mean by that is every single month The I put together a summary report Of all of the discussion summaries sent to me by strategy liaisons Translated into English from a number of different languages And they're sorted by three thematic areas and compiled into a report on that These reports are sent to working groups so that they can read directly the feedback from the community There are chances for them to ask feedback or to follow up in this report And close those feedback loops and let the community know sort of what they're thinking And how their ideas are being received Next slide please The first report came out last month and it was a March and April summary report The report for May will be compiled in the next few days and posted online If you haven't engaged much with movement strategy so far I would really encourage you to take a quick glance at this The value is it is a way of reviewing what people from your geographic or language or project based community Have been saying about movement strategy and about our future You can check to make sure that your perspective is represented accurately Or to see what other ideas are not included that you would really like to see your voice too Next slide please I'd like to turn things over to Rupika now to talk a little bit about how it's going being a strategy liaison What are things like on a day-to-day basis facilitating movement strategy conversations I know both from the team that I lead and for the volunteers that I work with There's been a lot of learning curves and the way to best engage people and take a really inclusive approach To make sure that more experienced Wikimedians and newer Wikimedians have a chance to have their voices heard So Rupika take it away and talk to us about the Hindi community experience that you've been having Thank you Kelsey Hey everyone this is Rupika Sharma I'm community strategist from Hindi community It's pleasure to share our team's work with you all today One of the most beautiful things about the strategy process is that it is collaborative work with the community Mapping how the future of Wikimedia movement will be by 2030 And in this collaborative process it has been of utmost importance that we have diversity of different voices and players of community So we have to create balance and equity in the strategy direction of our movement Most of the active Hindi community is situated in India It is one of the most emerging communities of global south And we have different actors who are active in different online platforms such as Wikipedia with source, dictionary, Wikidata While others are more active in offline contributions from organizing outreach events to plan partnerships And in order to ensure diversity of different voices and process We have reached out to community on different channels Some of the loud voices that are most active on Hindi messenger group Whatsapp group chat and village bomb of Hindi Wikimedia And in one of the surveys we found out that most of the members felt more safe and secure in giving feedback anonymously Where they had no fear of being attacked by some of the loud voices And this was especially true for the underrepresented voices of female members, other caste and religious minorities That are not able to express openly and participate in decision making process or open community conversations We found out that this was a bigger issue in emerging communities Like India where cultural and religious aspects affect the contributions of the community members And how important it is to bridge the gap for the minorities who are still the underrepresented part of movement In decision making process and online space And giving them a chance to express their voice is essential If we want to create a balance in the development of the strategy direction for our movement And for ensuring we have diversity and inclusion of all voices We have tried different approaches We have special social media channel for the minorities And we are taking special efforts to provide safe space to members who want to provide anonymous feedbacks With one-on-one interviews and anonymous surveys And the result of these efforts has resulted in making community members feel appreciated and included And many members from minorities have expressed their gratitude and delight in this inclusive approach by foundation And for us it is a very special feeling to make this happen Thanks Thank you Rubika Next slide please Just to wrap up on community conversations We really love to hear from you Do you like the approaches of how we're engaging with your community? Are there ways that we can do it better? Are there perspectives that you think are not being heard? Please feel free to reach out to me, myself, Tenvir, who also works with our working groups And Rubika as one of our strategy liaisons You can also find out contact information for strategy liaisons for our other languages And for our affiliates on our page on Meta Next slide Thank you so much And now we will open the floor to some questions and discussions I believe James is monitoring IRC for questions Yes, so there's been some discussion in IRC Which about the best practices on commons On how to link between gallery pages and category pages to WikiData and vice versa I don't know, Mike, if you're on and want to talk about that Yeah, can you hear me? Yes Oh good Yes, so the problem is that WikiData entries can only have one site link to a Wiki And commons has both galleries and categories It doesn't have too many galleries, but it still causes a problem when you want to site link the category And it's being blocked by a gallery So there is a workaround for that where you have to create a second WikiData item And then use the properties to link between the two Which the info box supports, it doesn't make any difference to that But it's something that is a bit of a faff and there isn't an obvious solution to it at the moment Thanks Is there a kind of place where this is documented or best practice is being discussed So people can weigh in and suggest what they would like to see There's been discussions in various places, particularly WikiData and Notability I think But apart from starting a new conversation somewhere, there wasn't really anywhere Excellent, thank you Alright, any questions from people in the room? Last chance? Any more questions from IRC? Alright I guess we will proceed then If you have ideas for this meeting, we would love to hear them Go to Meta, go to that particular page on Meta and send us your ideas We want to hear them, thank you And now it is time for WikiLove Please feel free to submit WikiLove on IRC or line up at the mic here and share your WikiLove with the world Sandra, did you say you had some WikiLove? I have so much WikiLove All my WikiLove at the moment goes to the Wikimedia Commons community and I'm feeling a bit tacky saying this But when I started working on structured data on Commons, I have to say I was totally frightened Because I thought we are going to introduce a very big change to this project And although, you know, I've always heard that the community has supported it quite for a long time And wanted this for a long time, it was still a scary thing But throughout the three years that we've been working on the project for now, or a bit more than two years Collaboration with the community has been really fantastic I really have to honestly say this We've gotten very very strong support from especially the administrators on Commons People have continuously provided very good feedback Sometimes critical, we know we have some people who are not quite convinced about the value of structured data on Commons But that is very valuable too And we're also grateful for the people who speak up on that part At this moment when we deploy, we have quite a few people already jumping on stuff Writing documentation as soon as new features are being deployed We have people thinking about structuring licenses We have people thinking about modeling stuff We have people very strongly submitting constant streams of feedback on every community consultation we do And I really want to give a very very big heartfelt thank you for everyone who puts time in this Who puts their passion in this It's been a right. It's still gonna be a right, but it's been absolutely awesome And I'm very happy to be part of this process Thank you all And Marshall, do you have wiki love? Hello I have wiki love for the Czech Wikipedia community Who has been one of the communities piloting the help panel feature that helps New editors ask questions to the help desk And I want to give them a shout out because their community has been answering questions on their wiki's help desk With a median response time of 13 minutes over the last few months So there's seven or eight of them that are really active on the help desk And getting newcomers responses really fast And that helps them continue their edits and hopefully be retained on the wiki So thank you Hi, I wanted to give lots of wiki love to the turkey user group And also to M&A for their fantastic work on the recent social media campaign to lift the block of wikipedia and turkey And also for keeping us updated on local developments and news that's been really helpful And also to the affiliates who mobilized around that social media campaign as well Thank you so much I wanted to send some wiki love to wikimedia check again This time for the hackathon, for organizing the hackathon and to support us within the foundation This was one of the best organized hackathons that I've attended and I've attended quite a number already So thanks again Following on from that, I'd like to voice Lukas Verkmeisters But also my own heartfelt thanks to everyone that came to the hackathon and made it such a successful experience The organizers did a great job but also all the participants made it a wonderful experience So thank you We just wanted to share much wiki love for Sati and Katie who have been wonderful colleagues over many years I have been moping around the office all day making very sad noises But yeah, thank you Yeah, I want to say thank you to Sati who's here, yay I hadn't gotten a chance to work with Sati until this year when we were on strategy together and it was a delight And I was finally able to see all the joy that people get from working with her and I was really happy to do that Katie has been an amazing mentor, I feel like she's always calling me out on things and making me do stuff So I would definitely miss her around here, so lots of wiki love for both Sati and Katie Sorry, I'm going to take you back on this Hi Sati So both Sati and Katie have, they've been the two people who introduced me to the movement So before I start like cracking up, either in laughter or in tears, I just want to say thank you to you both Yeah, you're both great And Katie is not here, she's great wherever she is I wanted to offer some wiki love to the CR team, especially you, Elena, who was up here a moment ago We've done a four month consultation on the brand proposal It's had lots of discussion in lots of places, it's wrapping up right now And the reason it went so well was because of Kim and Elena being great partners with us on that So thanks to CR and to Kim and Elena Florence, I think you're unmuted Why did you leave me the microphone? No, I didn't Okay, new to me Would anyone else like to share wiki love, either online or in person? Well, with that, I think that wraps it up for the activities meeting this month We will see you all next month, thank you