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    • CommentRowNumber1.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeFeb 10th 2012
    • (edited Feb 10th 2012)

    I have added at HomePage in the section Discussion a new sentence with a new link:

    If you do contribute to the nLab, you are strongly encouraged to similarly drop a short note there about what you have done – or maybe just about what you plan to do or even what you would like others to do. See Welcome to the nForum (nlabmeta) for more information.

    I had completly forgotton about that page Welcome to the nForum (nlabmeta). I re-doscivered it only after my recent related comment here.

    • CommentRowNumber2.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeSep 15th 2012
    • (edited Sep 15th 2012)

    Every now and then I receive private email with comments on or questions about nnLab entries. Somebody wants to know how to generate an SVG graphics in some entry, somebody asks about how to understand a given explanation, or some expert sends a long list of facts he finds is missing in some entry.

    Mostly I think that these messages would better be sent here to the nnForum. On the one hand because in some cases I am not actually the author of the given material that the comment is about and hence am not the right person to contact, on the other because even if I react and edit some entry, that reaction should be discussed here publically anyway, and so it would be all the more useful if already the original comment were visible here.

    But since these emails keep coming, I now thought that maybe a further comment on the HomePage might help.

    I have expanded the previous section “Discussion” there as follows. Just a suggestion. Let me know what you think. Feel free to edit further:


    Discussion, Comments, Questions

    {#Discussion}

    While we work on the nnLab, we talk to each other on the nForum. We inform ourselves about latest edits to the nnLab in the part nForum – latest changes and discuss these edits there.

    If you do make contributions to the nnLab, you are strongly encouraged to similarly drop a short note there about what you have done – or maybe just about what you plan to do or even what you would like others to do. See Welcome to the nForum (nlabmeta) for more information.

    Also if you do not want to contribute to the nnLab, but if you have a comment on an entry – say because you are an expert and feel that information is wrong or missing – or a question – say because you are a layman and feel that things could be explained better – then preferably you post that comment or question to the nForum, where it is visible to everybody who might be concerned.

    In case that you do feel that this is not an option and that you do need to contact privately (say by email) a single author of an nnLab page, please make sure that you know who the right author is. Beware that the nnLab pages are visibly “signed” only by the name of the last person who made any edit on the page, no matter how minor. To find the author who made the edit that you want to comment or ask about privately, you should click on the link “History” at the bottom of any page to see which version was authored by whom.

    • CommentRowNumber3.
    • CommentAuthorTodd_Trimble
    • CommentTimeSep 15th 2012

    Yes, that sounds very good. I just made a few minor edits to what you wrote.

    Of course, this will probably not completely stop the emails from coming to you. Probably because for many people, you are the nLab, Urs. :-)

    • CommentRowNumber4.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 4th 2013
    • (edited Apr 4th 2013)

    Over on the Univalent Foundations list the issue arose about whether nLab material may be used in Wikipedia articles, i.e. if “we allow” it.

    I pointed to the HomePage which has a statement of the conditions of use of nnLab material, essentially saying: “Yes, of course! If you acknowledge your sources, as usual in academia.”

    Now somebody pointed out that the HomePage talked about use “in publications”, which might seem to be restrictive. Therefore I have now edited the relevant sentence accordingly; now it reads thus:

    Using and distributing content obtained from the nnLab is free and encouraged if you acknowledge the source, as usual in academia.

    • CommentRowNumber5.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 4th 2013
    • (edited Apr 4th 2013)

    I have also copied in a link to some cc-page that is supposed to express the same idea more officially, see here.

    I don’t really know about these things. I just hear that some people who want to use nLab material say they’d feel reassured if there is such a link. Those of you who know more about this stuff, please fine-tune as necessary.

    • CommentRowNumber6.
    • CommentAuthorAndrew Stacey
    • CommentTimeApr 5th 2013

    I’ve removed the CC link for now. I recall a lengthy discussion about licences which didn’t get resolved (if I remember right) so a CC licence might not be valid.

    But it might not be necessary. Is there a transcript of the discussion that I can read? What exactly do they want to do? Copy, or just attribute a source?

    • CommentRowNumber7.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 5th 2013
    • (edited Apr 5th 2013)

    It was about copying material to Wikipedia.

    They felt unsure about if it was “legal” to do it without that link to the CC-thing.

    I think that if it takes such a link to make clear that nLab material is there to be shared for the greater good of mankind, then by all means we should include such a link.

    • CommentRowNumber8.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 5th 2013
    • (edited Apr 5th 2013)

    Where Andrew removed the link to the cc-license at HomePage I have now added the following sentence:

    (There is currently no consensus on a more formal license statement, but if it matters check if relevant individual contributors state such on their nLab homepages.)

    Then I have added the pointer to that CC-license to my personal page here.

    Since the material in question happens to have been contributed by me, with a polishing edit by Mike Shulman, that might do the trick already.

    • CommentRowNumber9.
    • CommentAuthorTobyBartels
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2013

    It is illegal to blindly copy material from nLab to Wikipedia even if we put in that licence statement. That's because past contributors never agreed to release the material that they wrote. (I'm not suggesting that this is the result of a good law; but it is the result of the law as it is, at least in most countries.)

    I don't think that Urs's statement is really even good enough for future contributions, since contributors might never have seen or agreed to it. (We should put something prominent on the edit page itself, like Wikipedia does.) In any case, it can't be retroactive, and this will contaminate everything that modifies a page written before we adopt a licence.

    However, for those who want to copy from the nLab with more care, principal contributors can give permission to use our edits. Then as long as copiers check that they copy only material written by these contributors (except for minor edits without creative content, such as grammar and spelling fixes, perhaps even fixes of mathematical thinkos), then they are OK. (I already give permission to use anything that I write, anywhere.)

    • CommentRowNumber10.
    • CommentAuthorTobyBartels
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2013

    Copying material from the nLab to Wikipedia, while perfectly fine with me, is far more than what is normally done in academia. In academia, we don't normally copy entire texts or even large portions thereof; we make minor quotations and copy ideas, with credit. This is already legal, on Wikipedia and elsewhere. (Minor quotations can be a grey area of the law, an area which goes by such names as ‘fair use’ and ‘fair dealing’. Anything normally done in academia would probably be legal on Wikipedia, but probably not more.)

    • CommentRowNumber11.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2013
    • (edited Apr 9th 2013)

    It already and since long ago says in words on the HomePage that contributors understand that their contributions can be used elsewhere, with due attribution.

    In my life in academia, I make and distribute copies of other people’s work all the time, often a few dozen per day.

    Why make it more complicated than it is? The idea that somebody types something into the nLab and later complains when he sees it somewhere else on the internet seems unrealistic. If anyone doesn’t want to share text, he or she won’t type it into a public wiki.

    Especially not one that says on its HomePage: contributors understand that others may use their contributions. The cc-license thing is just there to say this again, more formally.

    • CommentRowNumber12.
    • CommentAuthorTobyBartels
    • CommentTimeApr 15th 2013

    Why make it more complicated than it is?

    Take that up with the Wikimedia Foundation. What we have simply is not good enough to meet their standards for inclusion.

    I don't think that we should bend over backwards to make it fit, either. But they are very careful about copyright law, and we are not.

    In my life in academia, I make and distribute copies of other people’s work all the time, often a few dozen per day.

    That also falls under fair use/dealing. But putting a copy of their article up on your web site (or Wikipedia) goes beyond that.

    • CommentRowNumber13.
    • CommentAuthorTobyBartels
    • CommentTimeApr 15th 2013

    I may be missing something, but I don't see anything on the Home Page that suggests that material from the nLab might be copied to other websites. Again, I have no objection to that, but we are far from establishing that people have the legal right to do this, even though we would all be happy with it.

    • CommentRowNumber14.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 15th 2013

    I don’t understand this.

    we are far from establishing that people have the legal right to do this, even though we would all be happy with it.

    What is it that keeps us from declaring whatever we want about the material which we create and host?

    Take that up with the Wikimedia Foundation. What we have simply is not good enough to meet their standards for inclusion.

    What does that mean? Which part of CC BY-SA 3.0 requires that “what I have is good enough to meet Wikimedia’s standard of incllusion”?

    What is the big difference between the text of CC BY-SA 3.0 and what it says on HomePage? Is it that you interpret “use” as not including “share”?

    Why don’t we just change it then? Or else, which CC-license do you think does capture what it says on HomePage?

    But maybe you can put me in perspective more generally about what the problem or even the issue here is. To my mind the situation is: we are investing energy into making stuff available publically and usefully, since it is good for scientific knowledge to be available publically and usefully. Now part of the public that uses the material asks us to state more “formally” that they may use it. Why not do so?

    • CommentRowNumber15.
    • CommentAuthorAndrew Stacey
    • CommentTimeApr 15th 2013

    What is it that keeps us from declaring whatever we want about the material which we create and host?

    The whole problem is that word “we”. There is nothing that keeps us from doing so, but who are the “we” and “us” in this? Legally, it is everyone who has contributed to the material that you want to relicense.

    When someone contributes to the nLab we don’t make them sign a form allowing us to use their contribution for whatever nefarious schemes we have. The fact that they contribute gives us a de facto licence to use their contribution on the nLab within the bounds of “expected use”. So as it is a wiki, we’re fine to modify it and reuse it in other places on the nLab. (NB I am not a lawyer …) But taking it from the nLab to Wikipedia is not part of the normal use of the nLab so isn’t covered by this.

    Now, there may be provision in law that would allow us to claim all contributions as “belonging” to us, if we could figure out who the “us” is (I guess I’d have the strongest legal claim here). I’m not convinced we’d want to do this even if we could and I doubt that we could. It may also be possible to get a line drawn in terms of contributions which says “Any contribution below (whatever that means) this line is not subject to copyright” and then get the agreement of all other contributors to agree to some sort of relicensing (though I remember Zoran arguing against the SA part of CC-BY-SA).

    Note that all of this only applies to direct copying. Academic reuse is of course completely fine. That is, someone can take the results from one of our pages and rewrite them into another article. There’s not even a requirement for attribution here, just a widely held academic standard that says “If you don’t attribute your work, we’ll sneer at you.”.

    Moreover, if there is an article where all the (significant) contributors can be identified and give their permission, that’s again fine. Similarly, if you create a new page and put a banner at the top saying “This page may one day become an article. By editing this page you agree that this can be done with your contribution and that the resulting page can be published in an academic journal.”

    • CommentRowNumber16.
    • CommentAuthorAndrew Stacey
    • CommentTimeApr 15th 2013

    This just occurred to me.

    By way of a similar situation, consider contributions to the site TeX-SX. By posting some code there, I make it available under CC-BY-SA(3.0) simply by virtue of posting. However, that’s a lousy licence for code and makes it difficult for people to reuse that code in their documents (should they attribute my code in their actual article? Seems a bit over the top!). So I (and others) decided to relicense our code. I have the power to do that as the copyright holder, but no-one else does even though it’s already CC-BY-SA. To make my code as usable as possible, I put it in the public domain. Now anyone can use my code and don’t even have to say where they got it from. But they can only do that with my code (and that of others that have been relicensed). For others then technically they still need to use CC-BY-SA.

    You can see some of the discussion here.

    • CommentRowNumber17.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 17th 2013
    • (edited Apr 17th 2013)

    If you are worried about previous contributors not agreeing and going to sue us, then let’s state on HomePage “All contributions to the nLab are licensed under blah from NOW on.”, where “NOW” is some date.

    You suggest:

    that’s again fine. Similarly, if you create a new page and put a banner at the top saying “This page may one day become an article. By editing this page you agree that this can be done with your contribution and that the resulting page can be published in an academic journal.”

    Good, so the suggestion under discussion is to put this kind of statement right at the HomePage, to apply globally. Why should we state it for each page separately?

    The people who were asking me to add this license statement say this is just the same statement as used on Wikipedia. It seems that if for a wiki with number of contributors order of 10 610^6 this is a viable solution then for our wiki with contributors order of 10 010^0 it’s good, too.

    • CommentRowNumber18.
    • CommentAuthorTobyBartels
    • CommentTimeApr 17th 2013

    I endorse Andrew #15 as an answer to Urs #14. This addresses Urs #17.

    Why should we state it for each page separately?

    Because otherwise it won't hold up in court. (Whether it holds up for Wikipedia is another matter, but there are people there who know what will hold up in court, so in the long run it won't be enough.)

    If somebody goes directly to one of our pages and adds a paragraph of prose which is then incorporated into the article, then there's no evidence that they ever saw the Home Page. They could come along later and say that their paragraph was a creative exposition over which they retain all rights, and they never gave permission to put anything derived from it on Wikipedia. If necessary (say, if they go further and say that they never gave us permission to remix it on the nLab and it's a too big headache to argue about what qualifies as ‘fair use’), we can probably just delete their material. But Wikipedia wants to be sure that everything is good from the beginning, to the point that people can fearlessly sell copies of Wikipedia articles (on DVDs) for fund-raising.

    The people who were asking me to add this license statement say this is just the same statement as used on Wikipedia.

    The statement on Wikipedia appears prominently on every edit page. We could do this too, and probably should; we just need to agree on the licence. (I would suggest CC-by, which is good enough for Wikipedia.) This thread is probably not a good place to discuss that, since it wouldn't be peculiar to the Home Page.

    Even if we do this, however, it may be very tricky to apply. If an article A has a significant contribution from an anonymous editor in 2012, then it's not covered. Unless you check its edit history, you don't know if an article has this. But worse, article B may be created in 2014 with some text copied from A and then modified (say if B = co-A, which comes up a lot). Since there's not always a record of this, none of the material is trustworthy. (Wikipedia ran into this problem when it converted from GNU FDL to CC-by-sa; changing the licence for future contributions would eventually leave everything uncertain. They eventually convinced Richard Stallman to write a one-time exception into the FDL to allow this, but we don't have even that option.)

    We should put a licensing agreement on the edit pages anyway. If Wikipedians use their discernment to judge that something's OK, then they may be able to use it. (And you can tell them right now that anything written only by you or me is free for copying, because you allow them and I allow everybody.)

    • CommentRowNumber19.
    • CommentAuthorzskoda
    • CommentTimeApr 18th 2013
    • (edited Apr 18th 2013)

    Moreover, if there is an article where all the (significant) contributors can be identified and give their permission

    I do not think that it is reasonable for a user to browse through very long history to identify all the concrete contributors to a cited page; unless it is about rare and very fundamental discovery :) Of course, sometimes it is clear who the main contributor to some entry is, at least to most people who are somewhat close to the nnLab inner workings; somewhat less obvious to a newcomer.

    • CommentRowNumber20.
    • CommentAuthorTobyBartels
    • CommentTimeApr 18th 2013

    No, it's not reasonable; but if people want to copy text from the nLab to Wikipedia and comply with Wikipedia's requirements, then that's what they have to do. And they can't just look at the history list either; they would have to contact each of us and get us to agree that we wrote it all and didn't copy it from somewhere else (including another nLab page with more contributors). Nothing that we put on the Lab now can change this consequence of copyright law, our past practices, and Wikipedia's requirements.

    • CommentRowNumber21.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 18th 2013
    • (edited Apr 18th 2013)

    We could do this too, and probably should;

    Yup. Glad to hear this.

    we just need to agree on the licence. (I would suggest CC-by, which is good enough for Wikipedia.)

    Whatever you find appropriate.

    (What puzzled me is that you and others who worry about being sued by nLab contributors argue or did argue against stating a formal license. It would seem to me that those licenses were dreamed up precisely to cope with such worries. But what do I know. In any case, if simply stating a string of symbols of the form CC-something makes people feel better/safer when using the nLab, we should by all means add such.)

    • CommentRowNumber22.
    • CommentAuthorTobyBartels
    • CommentTimeApr 19th 2013

    I'm not worried, Wikipedia is. And even Wikipedia isn't really worried about being sued (not in this case), but they have a uniform policy.

    • CommentRowNumber23.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeMar 29th 2014

    I have added to the HomePage after “For more see” a pointer to the Wikipedia entry on the nnLab.

    • CommentRowNumber24.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeSep 11th 2014

    Since I was being asked about it a few times now, I have added to HomePage in the section Steering Committee the following lines.

    The domain ncatlab.orgncatlab.org and the nnLab’s virtual server are owned (rented) by Urs Schreiber. The technical administration of the software installation is done by Adeel Khan Yusufzai (and was previously done by Andrew Stacey for several years).

    Regarding the “steering committee”: I keep having the thought that there is a certain gap between what might be its intention and what it is in reality. I keep thinking that we ought to improve on this. But also I have really no spare energy and leisure left, so better we won’t.

    • CommentRowNumber25.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeAug 3rd 2015
    • (edited Aug 3rd 2015)

    I have

    • updated all the links to the nnForum from HomePage from the deprecated “mathforge.org” to “ncatlab.org”;

    • removed the paragraphs on technical problems which no longer exist;

    • updated the information as to who pays for the server. (Not sure what happened here, I had thought that information had been updated weeks back when the server migrated to CMU)

    • CommentRowNumber26.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJul 5th 2016

    I have edited the section Software requirements on the nnLab HomePage. I have removed the pointer to MathPlayer for IE, because I seem to remember that this no longer works.

    Instead I have highlighted more that presently the only browser that really works for viewing the nnLab is Firefox and its derivatives. (Or else, please add names of other browsers that do, too.)

    This is how the section reads now:

    The nnLab sends mathematical formulas to the browser using MathML.

    Notice that you don’t need to know any MathML for editing the nnLab, only your browser does. You write formulas into the nnLab between dollar signs in iTeX, which is very similar to ordinary LaTeX.

    Presently only Firefox and its derivatives have implemented native rendering of MathML. Presently all other browsers fall back to invoking MathJax. This works fine on small pages, but on pages with substantial content the MathJax rendering takes up to several minutes.

    This means that presently you should use Firefox or its derivatives to view the nnLab (free download of Firefox).

    • CommentRowNumber27.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2017

    I have added Richard Williamson’s name to the section “Server” here. Now it reads:

    The technical administration of the software installation is done by Adeel Khan Yusufzai and Richard Williamson

  1. Thanks!

    • CommentRowNumber29.
    • CommentAuthorTim_Porter
    • CommentTimeJan 13th 2018
    • (edited Jan 13th 2018)

    The Home Page is blank for me. Yesterday (for me) there was an edit by 156.199.37.165 (anonymous). (I could not see what changes had been made. The source looked to be the same, so I do not understand what was happening.) I have rolled back to version 259.

    • CommentRowNumber30.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJan 13th 2018

    Thanks for noticing!

    The change that was made by “Anonymous” in rev 260 was right after the query box environment. Ordinarily that ends with

      =--
    

    but after Anonymous’s edit it ended with

      =--اا
    

    where the two vertical slashes are apparently something more unusual than it might seem, as you can see when you try to edit them out: The cursor behaves funnily when it hits these slashes.

    Anyway, it seems that these two slashes confused the parser and caused it to render an empty page, because removing them (testing in the Sandbox) made the page display again.

    Not sure what all this means. I hope it means somebody made some weird accidental edit, not knowing what they did.

  2. I’ll investigate when time allows. Been very busy recently, but have not forgotten about the issues raised,

    • CommentRowNumber32.
    • CommentAuthoradeelkh
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2018

    I am resigning, and leaving the technical administration of the nLab fully in the very capable hands of Richard Williamson.

    diff, v263, current

    • CommentRowNumber33.
    • CommentAuthorDavidRoberts
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2018

    Thanks for all your hard work, Adeel, it is very much appreciated.

    • CommentRowNumber34.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2018
    • (edited Jul 20th 2018)

    I was about to update the line “administration was previously taken care of by Andrew Stacey” to “by Adeel Khan and before that by Andrew Stacey”, but then thought that was beginning to look funny, and so I removed that line alltogether. Instead, I added a remark indicating that we could always do with more hands: Now it resads:

    The technical administration of the software installation is currently taken care of by Richard Williamson, thankfully. (If you wish to lend a hand, please contact us.)

    diff, v264, current

    • CommentRowNumber35.
    • CommentAuthorRichard Williamson
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2018
    • (edited Jul 20th 2018)

    I have written to Adeel privately, but wish to express publically as well that, though I understand the reasons (no time!), I am very sorry that he has ’formally’ stepped down. I think he has done a fantastic job; with admirable humility and working mostly in the background, he really got the nLab into a stable, well-performing, and more robust state, and put in place all the tough groundwork. I have simply been making small additions on top of the more fundamental work that he did. He was also a pleasure to work with.

    I would really encourage someone (or ideally several people) now to take the opportunity to become directly involved with the nLab maintenance. It need not be big things, there are many small things which could be done every now and then; and there need not be a long-term commitment, just a willingness to contribute when possible. I am very happy to break down tasks or to explain the codebase or infrastructure.

    • CommentRowNumber36.
    • CommentAuthorTodd_Trimble
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2018

    Indeed, Adeel will be missed, quietly keeping things running seamlessly. Thank you Adeel for all your hard work.

    • CommentRowNumber37.
    • CommentAuthorMike Shulman
    • CommentTimeJul 23rd 2018

    Thanks very much for all your work Adeel! We’ll miss you.

    • CommentRowNumber38.
    • CommentAuthorDavidRoberts
    • CommentTimeMar 17th 2019

    Mention of use of Instiki fork.

    diff, v267, current

  3. Thanks! I actually like best that bug reports, etc, are raised at the nForum, so have tweaked that line accordingly :-).

    diff, v268, current

  4. Removing the ’Search the nLab query box’, which seems unnecessary for the home page, especially as there is already a search box!

    diff, v271, current

    • CommentRowNumber41.
    • CommentAuthorDavidRoberts
    • CommentTimeMar 29th 2019

    Wasn’t that a Google search box? I recall it was put there because the nLab search can be slow, and the results are not so easy to check as to context of results etc.

    • CommentRowNumber42.
    • CommentAuthorRichard Williamson
    • CommentTimeMar 29th 2019
    • (edited Mar 29th 2019)

    Yes, but I mean, why not just use Google?! I’m not sure how many people would log on to the home page of the nLab for this search functionality. The nLab search is not terribly slow, but I’ve actually done a bit of work on re-implementing it in a way which would make it much faster; other things had higher priority, though, so it is not finished yet. Of course that one could link to Google instead in that box if desired, but I think it is likely we have the potential to do a better job with an internal search (e.g. the current one distinguishes page titles and content).

    • CommentRowNumber43.
    • CommentAuthorDavidRoberts
    • CommentTimeMar 29th 2019

    Yes, I think embedding a Google search box not the most elegant thing. One can just click in the browser omni-bar and search there, which is what most people are doing anyway for everything else. As you were!

    • CommentRowNumber44.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeMar 30th 2019

    It’s true that you and me, we don’t need that box. But back when we had added it, it was because we learned that some users just don’t figure out how to use Google to search within the nLab. I vote for keeping the box! It helps some people and otherwise it doesn’t do any harm.

    • CommentRowNumber45.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeMar 30th 2019
    • (edited Mar 30th 2019)

    If you don’t mind, I have put the box back in, just for the time being. Let me suggest this:

    We should have some search box there, if only to give some sense that the Home page is the door into the nnLab, and preempting any puzzlement as to where the content is hiding. If we feel a search box that secretly falls back to but a Google search with site:ncatlab.org-flag is not the right thing to have (but why actually? It works well) then I suggest we add whatever other search technology we prefer, but keep the box as the visual gadget that it is. Well, we can of course think about improving it’s visual appearance, if that is felt to be necessary. But I wish for there being some kind of search box right in the top part of the HomePage.

  5. That’s fine for me, my main objection, when working on the visual tweaks, was that I felt it looked a bit ugly/redundant, especially since there is already a search box. We could of course dig out some numbers on how many people use it.

    • CommentRowNumber47.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeMar 30th 2019

    Back then we felt it is the built-in Instiki-search box that is redundant, because we felt searching through it wasn’t useful. We had created the new search box in reaction to poeple telling us that they don’t find stuff on the nLab through the Insitiki-search box.

    If redundancy is an issue, maybe we can remove the built-in Instiki search box? I, for one, never used it.

    Or we add more instructions. If I remember well, the Instiki-search box allowed some regexp-functionality which Google search doesn’t (?), and which could at times be useful for expert users for very fine-grained searches.

    Or maybe we keep the visiual incarnation of the box that currently does the Instiki-search, but make it behave like the Google-search box instead!

  6. My feeling would be that the Instiki search box has the potential to be very useful, because, unlike Google, it can understand some structural aspects of the nLab (page titles only at the moment, but one could imagine much more). I do occasionally use it myself in its present form, but it could be a lot better. As mentioned, I have done a bit of work on speeding it up, but not finished yet, and other things have priority.

    • CommentRowNumber49.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeMar 30th 2019

    The page searching the nLab is meant to explain what the two different search boxes do. Maybe that could do with some updating.

    • CommentRowNumber50.
    • CommentAuthorMike Shulman
    • CommentTimeMar 31st 2019

    I use the built-in search box and wouldn’t want that functionality to go away. But if we think it is confusing or seems redundant to have two search boxes, we could combine them into one search together with a checkbox or other way for the user to specify which kind of search is desired.

    • CommentRowNumber51.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 3rd 2019
    • (edited Apr 3rd 2019)

    I have added the following line to reflect the recent development:

    The nnLab page style is due to Jake Bian, originating with his Kan browser extension

    In the course of this I

    1. changed the section name “Server” to “Installation”

    2. moved the paragraph on not running Instiki from “Software requirements” to “Installation”

    for that should make good sense, while previously it didn’t really.

    diff, v274, current

  7. I’m not sure about the section name, because it might suggest instructions for how to install the nLab, but otherwise looks good! Thanks!

    • CommentRowNumber53.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 3rd 2019

    Oh, I see. Okay, I changed it back to “Server”.

    • CommentRowNumber54.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 4th 2019
    • (edited Apr 4th 2019)

    I have further edited the section Server and Setup.

    (Is that a better name, “Server and setup”? Just “Server” doesn’t do it justice. Or maybe “Server and software” or “Server and software installation”? But you said that could be misleading.)

    I broke up the text more into a list of distinguished items.

    Removed the words “Historically was running on Instiki…” for that seems to be a misplaced choice of words at this point. Instead I made it read straightforwardly like so: “The nnLab runs on a custom fork of Instiki.”

    But mainly I added the previously missing mentioning of David R.’s hand in creating the logo!:

    The nnLab logo is due to David Roberts, inspired by Matisse’s painting La Gerbe. Besides being an inside reference to higher structures known as gerbes, the logo represents maybe computational trinitarianism or the progression of modalities or generally the unity of diverse mathematical phenomena revealed by the nPOV.

    • CommentRowNumber55.
    • CommentAuthorDavid_Corfield
    • CommentTimeApr 4th 2019

    Perhaps also the logo hints at the Brane Bouquet.

    • CommentRowNumber56.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeNov 7th 2019
    There’s a spelling error under “ Server and setup” section in the passage saying how blab doesn’t affect the opinion of the Air Force office or something. You wrote “authomors” instead of “authors”.
    • CommentRowNumber57.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeNov 7th 2019

    Thanks, fixed now.

    By the way, the funding by the MIC has meanwhile run out, and I have rented an AWS server instead. For the time being the nLab installation has not moved yet, as Richard is working on doing some adjustments first. But in the near future we’ll be migrating servers and the opinion of the US Air Force then no longer needs consideration.

    • CommentRowNumber58.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeNov 15th 2019

    I have expanded the following line, to include mentioning of Alexis:

    The technical administration of the nnLab software installation is in the hands of our system administrator Richard Williamson and assistant system administrator Alexis Hazell.

    diff, v278, current

    • CommentRowNumber59.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeNov 15th 2019

    and I moved the line about the nLab running such-and-such software up to right after the line on sysadmins, so that it is now before the lines on page style and on logo. That ordering should make more sense.

    diff, v278, current

  8. Use a better preposition and fix the capitalisation of GitHub

    ayberkt

    diff, v279, current

  9. Tweaks to explain the coming collaboration with the Topos Institute with regard to software infrastructure and funding. As suggested by Brendan and Urs respectively, I will create a page with more details on the funding and also a dedicated nForum thread as soon as I can today (have to dash just now).

    diff, v282, current

  10. This may be controversial, but I am offering this edit for discussion. I found the old ’Purpose’ section of the home page to be rather ’preachy’, trying a bit too hard. I have now replaced with it with a heavily rewritten section, and also tweaked the introductory sentence at the top.

    I am happy for this to be discussed and modified; hopefully this edit just gives a stimulus to arrive at something better than before.

    diff, v283, current

  11. Tweaking the wording of the paragraph about funding, and also adding a sentence to the first introductory paragraph to emphasise that the nLab also has material from computer science and linguistics, for example.

    diff, v286, current

  12. Rewriting the section formerly titled ’Software requirements’, now titled ’Viewing and editing the nLab’. In particular, I have removed the strongly worded message stating that one should use Firefox to view the nLab, replacing it by something more accurate these days. I have also removed some technical details which I don’t think a first-time reader needs to know.

    diff, v286, current

  13. Removing the cringeworthy line

    While we work on the nnLab, we talk to each other on the nForum

    and trying to more generally improve the section about the nForum.

    diff, v286, current

    • CommentRowNumber66.
    • CommentAuthorCalebSchear
    • CommentTimeApr 5th 2021
    Hello I am an Undergrad studying physics, I love this website but I have no clue whats going on, is there like a start page (I am taking linear Algebra right now) and I think having a starting place on this website would be really useful to me, or maybe a few reads and recommendations that would help me understand just the general notation and ideas that will allow me to make sense of this website. Thanks.
    • CommentRowNumber67.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 6th 2021

    Hi CalebSchear,

    when I was an undergrad in physics and was learning linear algebra and getting interested in categories, I found this book here a useful read:

    (I suppose you’ll know how to get an electronic copy? Otherwise drop me a note.)

    Otherwise, the closest to a page here, where an aspiring mathematical physicist might go and just “start to read” is this:

    • CommentRowNumber68.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeMay 14th 2021
    • (edited May 14th 2021)

    re: #62:

    Sorry for the belated reaction, but I only just now happened to read the new opening lines of the HomePage. I really like this! Much better.

    • CommentRowNumber69.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeJan 19th 2022
    The Contents section to the right of the page contains a link to the nForum at the old website https://folk.ntnu.no/stacey/Mathforge/nForum/, it should be instead linked to the current website at https://nforum.ncatlab.org/
  14. http to https in link

    Anonymous

    diff, v288, current

  15. Richard Williamson has resigned

    Anonymous

    diff, v289, current

  16. updating main page to refer to the nLab technical board instead of Richard Williamson

    Anonymous

    diff, v292, current

    • CommentRowNumber73.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    Thanks.

    By the way, earlier today I have added Christian Sattler’s name to technical board (nlabmeta), under a new header “technical team”.

    Namely, in the last few weeks Christian, in close contact with Felix, has been doing some heroic work on the actual code of the installation. Besides fixing a bunch of little bugs and glitches (and more in the pipeline, I gather), Christian and Felix together coded for the recent speed enhancement, which you may have noticed.

    • CommentRowNumber74.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    While we’re talking about the nLab meta wiki, this page needs to be updated: Technical TODO list (nlabmeta). It was last updated in December 2019.

    • CommentRowNumber75.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    Also, what should be done about this page: nForum guidelines (nlabmeta)

    • CommentRowNumber76.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022
    • (edited Jun 6th 2022)

    Thanks for the alert regarding Technical TODO list (nlabmeta).

    I have added a warning there that the page is no longer maintained, and added a pointer to the closest analog, which is now here:

    • CommentRowNumber77.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    Thanks also for the alert regarding the page nForum guidelines (nlabmeta). This should be deleted, but since I am not sure if it is being pointed to, I have added some minimum of helpful pointers.

    • CommentRowNumber78.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    Same thing about the article Terms of Use (nlabmeta)

    • CommentRowNumber79.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    There is also the article On Scientific Contributions to the nLab (nlabmeta), last updated in 2009, and Proceedings preparation (nlabmeta), last updated in 2011.

    • CommentRowNumber80.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    This is seriously out of date: directory of personal webs (nlabmeta)

    • CommentRowNumber81.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    This is last updated in 2015: Organization of the nLab (nlabmeta)

    • CommentRowNumber82.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022
    • (edited Jun 6th 2022)

    Thanks once more. The entries Terms of Use (nlabmeta) and On Scientific Contributions to the nLab (nlabmeta) I have given the same pointers to the HomePage and the HowTo.

    The page Proceedings preparation (nlabmeta) was part of a more serious project. Not sure what to do about it. For the moment I left it as is.

    • CommentRowNumber83.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    This page was also last updated in 2009: options for personal webs (nlabmeta)

    • CommentRowNumber84.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022
    • (edited Jun 6th 2022)

    On directory of personal webs (nlabmeta) I have added a warning sentence on the status of the page.

    • CommentRowNumber85.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    At Organization of the nLab (nlabmeta) I have added pointers to HomePage and HowTo.

    • CommentRowNumber86.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJun 6th 2022

    At options for personal webs (nlabmeta) I have replaced the previous content by a brief message that personal webs are no longer being created.

    • CommentRowNumber87.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeAug 14th 2022
    • (edited Aug 14th 2022)

    Felix kindly alerts me of recent anonymous and unannounced edits to the HomePage (rev 293, rev 295).

    I have reverted these. It might make sense to add commentary along these lines (on string theory content on the nLab) but not by anonymous unannounced edits to the root page.

    diff, v296, current

    • CommentRowNumber88.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeSep 4th 2022

    There’s a query box on the home page. Query boxes are depreciated on the nLab.

  17. removing query box from the home page

    Anonymous

    diff, v298, current

  18. the query box was for proper alignment of the search with the rest of the page

    Anonymous

    diff, v298, current

  19. changing query box to standout box

    Anonymous

    diff, v298, current

    • CommentRowNumber92.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeSep 5th 2022

    It’s not a big deal at this point, but some thoughts:

    • I liked the green better. (The effect of the edits was just to change the box color.)

    • There is no software functionality associated with “query” boxes. What we “deprecated” is people trying to start a discussion inside such a box. If somebody (like me, in this case, many years ago) uses a “query” box in order to hack an optical box effect, that may not be elegant coding, but it’s not something that we agreed needs to be reverted.

    • It’s awkward to see so many Anonymous edits, in recent months. But it’s especially awkward to have anonymous edits to the HomePage.

    Therefore, even though the last edits are not a big deal, I’d suggest they should be reverted and that any further edits to the HomePage must be non-anonymous.

  20. removing random reference to string theory

    Anonymous

    diff, v299, current

  21. also changed the search box background color back to the original green

    Anonymous

    diff, v299, current

    • CommentRowNumber95.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeNov 28th 2022
    • (edited Nov 28th 2022)

    Prodded by Felix (from the technical board (nlabmeta)) I have (here) finally removed these outdated paragraphs:

    The nnLab server is currently hosted at Carnegie Mellon University, funded in the context of the HoTT MURI grant.

    The nLab runs on a server at Carnegie Mellon University that is supported by MURI grant FA9550-15-1-0053 from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed on the nLab are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the AFOSR.

    However, we will imminently be moving to the cloud, to an account registered to the Topos Institute. For this, we rely on donations which have kindly been made to the nLab. See funding of the nLab for an overview of the financial side of things. The nnLab is currently in the process of migrating to the cloud.

    and replaced them with this one:

    The nnLab server is currently hosted at Carnegie Mellon University, kindly provided by Steve Awodey.

    diff, v300, current

    • CommentRowNumber96.
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeNov 28th 2022
    What happened to the AWS account that the Topos Institute had set up for the nLab?
  22. n is not consistently TeXified in titles.

    Anonymous

    diff, v301, current

    • CommentRowNumber98.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeJan 21st 2023

    I happened to notice (only now, maybe it was announced here earlier and I missed it) that an Anonymous added “type theory” to the first sentence at HomePage.

    I appreciate the idea, but then let’s do this justice and say it properly: I have adjusted the first sentence to read as follows:

    This is a wiki for collaborative work on Mathematics, Physics, and Philosophy — especially (but far from exclusively) from the higher structures point of view: with a sympathy towards the tools and perspectives of homotopy theory/algebraic topology, homotopy type theory, higher category theory and higher categorical algebra.

    (So I added “higher structures” to before “nn-point of view” and then made the list of subjects appear complete with their higher/homotopy version.)

    diff, v302, current

  23. FIX LINK

    Adrian

    diff, v303, current

    • CommentRowNumber100.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 16th 2023

    I have moved the paragraph on where to post technical bug report out of the section “Installation” (here) into a dedicated new section “Contact” (here). Then I expanded further by disambiguating between software requests and other issues that involve policy decisions.

    diff, v304, current