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Wikipedia:Wikipedia in books

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Books which have discussed the Wikipedia concept.

Contents

[edit] 2009

Lazy Virtues Teaching Writing in the Age of Wikipedia - [1]

[edit] 2008

Supreme Courtship by Christopher Buckley mentioned the Wikipedia article for Camp David on pages 26 and 27.

"Pepper thumbed a Google search on her BlackBerry with her other hand. NSF Thurmont. The first match came up: "Camp David-Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.""

Wikipedia: The Missing Manual by John Broughton - more info

Investment Atlas by Kenneth G. Winans An investment history book that extensively referenced Wikipedia as a source for information. www.investmentatlas.com

Sheizaf Rafaeli and Yaron Ariel Rafaeli (2008). Online motivational factors: Incentives for participation and contribution in Wikipedia. In A. Barak (Ed.), Psychological aspects of cyberspace: Theory, research, applications (pp. 243-267). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

[edit] 2007

Wikipédia - Guia de Consulta e edição by Eduardo Pinheiro ISBN 978-989-615-037-2 (Portuguese)

[edit] 2006

[edit] December 2006

Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything by Don Tapscott and Anthony D. Williams explores how some companies in the early 21st century used mass collaboration and open-source technology such as wikis to be successful.

Europe at War 1939-1945 No Simple Victory by Norman Davies mentions Wikipedia in Chapter 6 (Portrayals), page 460/461 with the words: [A]nd there is Wikipedia, the self-regulating Internet encyclopedia, to which anyone can contribute. Professional historians tend to distrust such websites. The Web they say, is dangerous. It is full of dubious statements and manifest errors. So, too, one might add, is every other source of historical information.

[edit] 2005

[edit] October 2005

[edit] July 2005

[edit] June 2005

[edit] April 2005

[edit] March 2005

[edit] January 2005

[edit] Unknown

[edit] 2004

[edit] December 2004

[edit] November 2004

[edit] September 2004

[edit] August 2004

[edit] June 2004

[edit] May 2004

[edit] April 2004

[edit] March 2004

[edit] 2003

[edit] June 2003

Closed systems and other destructive orthodoxies of modernity are exhibiting the "supernova effect" — a supernova being a dying star that gets bigger and brighter in the very process of dying. Closed systems are supernovas. The flair that you see is their flare for dying.

Nine-Eleven was a fear response of a closed system to a future that looks more and more like an open-source movement. The world's first "open-source" consumer product is a soft drink called "OpenCola," which gives its recipe away on their website (www.opencola.org). Current other "open-source" projects include "OpenLaw", Open-Audio," and an encyclopedia called Wikipedia.

[edit] Unconfirmed

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