User:SDZeroBot/PROD sorting

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Culture/Food and drink[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-28 20:36 Morochuco (Cowboys of the Peruvian Andes) The Morochucos are the cowboys of the plains of the Peruvian Andes, living mainly in the Region of Ayacucho. They raise cattle and tame horses for their livelihood, and they engage in other typical activities of a cattle-horseman cowboy. They are comparable to other cowboys of Latin America such as the qorilazo, the cowboys from Cusco, also in Peru, the Chilean huaso, the Argentine/Bolivian/Uruguayan gaucho, the Spanish vaquero, the Colombian/Venezuelan llanero, and the Mexican charro. No secondary sources found. Looks like WP:OR to me. (Cocobb8)

Culture/Internet culture[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 19:36 Datacoup (New York based start up company) Datacoup was a New York-based start up company that provides a marketplace for individuals to sell a feed of their personal data, such as social media activity and credit card transactions, to information brokers for a monthly fee. In November 2019, Datacoup issued an email to users stating that it was shutting down operations and will be decommissioning all of its servers. Doesn't seem to meet WP:CORP, all coverage was just of the launch of the company, no sustained media interest. Its closure apparently wasn't even reported on. (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-23 02:35 Barco ColorTone Barco ColorTone was a stripped-down version of the Barco Creator image manipulation program. It was originally developed for IRIX, and only featured the base "CT-Brix", brush and colour correction modules. An additional "image quality estimator" module, not featured in Creator, was also added. Fails WP: N -- if de-PRODing, please add multiple independent sources that cover the subject in-depth. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 05:01 Word Up (video game) (computer pub game popular in the UK) Word Up also known as Word Soup is a popular SWP (skill with prize) game. Located on the itbox and other terminals, the game was developed by Big Fizz Games. lack of notability (Waxworker)
2024-05-27 03:50 Velocify (company) Velocify, Inc. is a cloud computing company, headquartered in El Segundo, California, that provides cloud-based intelligent sales automation software designed for fast-paced sales environments. Fails the notability guideline for companies. Sources are either trivial (routine announcements of funding, name changes, product releases, acquisitions, or winning insignificant awards), non-independent, or unreliable (Forbes contributors). Checked for decent sources under both "Velocify" and "Leads360" and could not find any. (Teratix)
2024-05-27 13:36 Zingaya Zingaya was launched in North America on September 14, 2010 at the DEMO conference.[citation needed] Zingaya provides next generation click-to-call services. Using Adobe Flash-based Voice over Internet Protocol technology, the company provides an embedded widget that forwards an end user through a VoIP call to landlines, mobile phones, Skype accounts, or other computers – whichever the website operator has specified. Fails the notability guideline for companies. (Teratix)
2024-05-28 22:36 Evil Empire (company) Evil Empire is a French video game developer based in Bordeaux, France. The company was created in 2019 by former Motion Twin employees to provide long term support for Dead Cells, and to let the former company focus on developing new IPs. Evil Empire worked on DLC and updates for Dead Cells until 2024, then launching its first original title, The Rogue Prince of Persia in early access. Potentially un-notable dev. (TheTechie)

Culture/Linguistics[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-25 14:03 Candice Bergen (disambiguation) (Topics referred to by the same term) Candice Bergen may refer to: Disambiguation page not required (WP:ONEOTHER). Primary topic article has a hatnote to the only other use. (Shhhnotsoloud)
2024-05-25 14:04 Daniel Béland (disambiguation) (Topics referred to by the same term) Daniel Béland may refer to: Disambiguation page not required (WP:ONEOTHER). Primary topic article has a hatnote to the only other use. (Shhhnotsoloud)
2024-05-25 14:29 Daniel Tupou (disambiguation) (Topics referred to by the same term) Daniel Tupou may refer to: Disambiguation page not required (WP:ONEOTHER). Primary topic article has a hatnote to the only other use. (Shhhnotsoloud)

Culture/Literature[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-25 22:26 June Juanico (Elvis Presley fan) June Juanico (born 19 November 1937) is a woman from Biloxi, Mississippi, whom the famous rock 'n' roll singer Elvis Presley dated in 1955 and 1956, for instance, when he took three weeks of vacation after having recorded his songs "Hound Dog" and "Don't Be Cruel" in the studio in New York City. Subject does not meet notability standards. (Strangerthings7112)
2024-05-22 19:01 Repairing Rainbows (Canadian memoir of Lynda Fishman) Repairing Rainbows is a 2010 memoir by Lynda Fishman. The book is a true story of family, tragedy and choices. Article on a seemingly non-notable self-published book, created by an WP:SPA. Nearly all of the sources, including all of those being used as "reviews" are primary, being from the official website. Searches did not turn up any reviews or coverage of the book in reliable sources, making it a failure of the WP:GNG and WP:NBOOK. (Rorshacma)
2024-05-28 16:29 Justice Waits (2005 book by Joel Davis) Justice Waits is a 2005 biography by Joel Davis about the 1980 murders of two UC Davis freshmen, John Riggins and Sabrina Gonsalves. Dubbed "The Sweetheart Murders", the case remained cold until August 27, 2002, when incriminating DNA evidence obtained from a blanket in the kidnappers' van proved that convicted child molester Richard Hirschfield was involved in the murders. Article is about a non-notable book. WP:BKCRIT (GranCavallo)
2024-05-28 18:07 Joshua Corin (American author and screenwriter) Joshua Corin is an American author and screenwriter. He is known for writing the novel Nuclear Winter Wonderland and a screenplay for the novel. Nuclear Winter Wonderland follows the story of an underachieving college kid, Adam Weiss, whose sister Anna is kidnapped by a lunatic nuclear terrorist. Doesn't seem to be notable. None notable award and non-notable book (was deleted for being non-notable in an AfD. Cannot find reliable third party sources for their notability. (Canterbury Tail)

Culture/Biography[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 00:57 Wynand Pienaar (South African rugby union player) Wynand Christo Pienaar (born 5 August 1989) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the Griffons. His regular position is fullback. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 02:35 Purrkur Pillnikk (Icelandic rock band) Purrkur Pillnikk ('Sleepy Chess-Player') was a rock band from late punk era in Iceland. The band existed for 18 months (1981–1982) and were very active as they released at least two LPs, one live-album and two EPs. The distinguishable character of the band were Einar Örn's howling and off-key singing and his lyrics that most often described very day-to-day things but with a lot of interwoven angst. Lack of notability (Revirvlkodlaku)
2024-05-22 14:55 Welsh Ladies Indoor Bowling Association The Welsh Ladies Indoor Bowling Association (WLIBA) (formed 1950) is the governing body for the indoor bowling clubs in Wales. It has 25 affiliated clubs. The WLIBA organise national competitions and select and manage the national side. Lacking secondary sources. Fails WP:ORGCRIT. (AusLondonder)
2024-05-22 17:31 Chuma Faas (South African rugby union player) Chuma Sean Kenosi Faas (born 22 January 1990 in Port Elizabeth, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played with the Eastern Province Kings. His regular position is scrum-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 17:33 Michael Bernardt (South African rugby union player) Michael Rudger Gerardus Bernardt (born 19 March 1993) is a South African professional rugby union player, who most recently played with the Eastern Province Kings. His regular position is centre, but he can also play as a fly-half or winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 17:39 Leo Kruger (rugby union) (Rugby player) Leo-Roubert Kruger (born (1997-07-11)11 July 1997) is a South African rugby union player for the Golden Lions in the Currie Cup and the Golden Lions XV in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 18:34 Cam de Leon (American artist (born 1961)) Cam de Leon (born 1961 in Modesto, California) is an American artist who specializes in surreal, dark imagery. He is best known for creating the artwork for Tool's 1991 demo EP 72826, the EP Opiate and the Ænima album, as well as working as a digital illustrator, doing concept and visual development, and character design for the feature animation industry. Insufficient independent sourcing. (Hatman31)
2024-05-23 01:51 Johan Jackson (Rugby player) Johan Jackson (born 24 January 1987) is a South African rugby union footballer. He plays either as an outside-centre or a winger. He represents the Pumas in the Currie Cup and Vodacom Cup, having previously played for the Blue Bulls, Valke and Golden Lions. Poorly sourced rugby BLP with no evidence of notability. Fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT due to lack of independent coverage available online. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 02:10 Minenhle Mthethwa (Rugby player) Minenhle Lethuxolo Mthethwa (born 5 August 1991) is a South African professional rugby union player who most recently played with the Eastern Province Kings. He usually plays as a winger, but can also play as an outside centre. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 02:12 Lance Louw (rugby union) (Rugby player) Lance Louw (born (1990-06-28)28 June 1990) is a South African rugby union player. His regular position is wing. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 02:14 Lindokuhle Welemu (Rugby player) Lindokuhle Welemu (born (1991-04-29)29 April 1991 in South Africa) is a South African rugby union player for the Griffons (rugby union) in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is lock. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 06:33 Wesley Cloete (South African rugby union player) Wesley Wyndham Cloete (born 8 February 1990) is a South African rugby union player. His regular position is prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 06:39 Dale Sabbagh (South African rugby union player) Dale Gavin Sabbagh (born 2 February 1991) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with Border Super League side Old Selbornians. His regular position is fly-half or full-back. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 15:01 Mikke Van Hool Mikke Van Hool (born 5 November 1967) is a Belgian former racing driver and racing team owner, who most recently drove at the Belgian GT Championship in 2008. Prior to this, he raced in the International Formula 3000 Championship with the team Astromega, which he also became manager for after 1995. Does not meet WP:GNG--coverage is limited to database entries and photographs, no secondary RS appear to be available. I found a mere-mention in an F1 memoir [1], but that's not enough coverage for a biography. (Rosguill)
2024-05-23 13:35 Mike Gaston (British radio DJ) Mike Gaston (created 1949) is a broadcast journalist, peace builder and singer/songwriter living in Northern Ireland. Essentially someone's resume blown up to encyclopedia article. The sources are all very passing mentions if they mention him at all (the more in-depth ones don't). The ones that do are just WP:ROUTINE schedules and whatnot. I don't see the sort of significant coverage needed for WP:GNG (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-23 19:10 Clyde Davids (South African rugby union player) Clyde Eathan Davids (born 17 April 1993) is a South African professional rugby union player who last played for the Blue Bulls in the Currie Cup. His regular position is number eight or flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 19:15 Helmut Lehmann (rugby union) (Rugby player) Helmut Lehmann is a former South African rugby union player, that played for Western Province in the Currie Cup and Vodacom Cup. His usual position is flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 19:23 Logan Basson (South African rugby union player) Logan Andrew Basson (born 9 March 1989) is a South African professional rugby union player who last played for Western Province in the Rugby Challenge. He is a utility back that can play as a full-back, winger or fly-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 20:41 Christian Rust (Rugby player) Hendri Christian Rust (born 7 April 1992) is a South African rugby union player for El Salvador in the División de Honor in Spain. His regular position is fly-half, but he can also play outside centre or fullback. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 23:13 Gato Preto Mestre Gato Preto (lit. Black Cat, 1929-2002) was a mestre of traditional capoeira Angola. Subject does not meet GNG, specifically SIGCOV. (Zsinj)
2024-05-24 05:27 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2010 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2010, the 42nd edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on Aug. 28th, 2010 at Resorts World Manila Grand Theater in Newport City, Pasay, Metro Manila. Carla Jenina Lizardo, the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas Intercontinental 2010, Barbara Salvador, Mutya ng Pilipinas Tourism International 2010 and Christi McGarry named as Mutya ng Pilipinas Asia Pacific 2010. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing but one is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:29 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2009 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2009, the 41st edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on Aug. 9th, 2009 in Baler, Aurora. Jane Bañares, the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas International 2009 and Jacqueline Schubert named as Mutya ng Pilipinas Tourism (Aurora) 2009. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing but one is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 07:29 Liu Kang (footballer) (Chinese footballer and coach) Liu Kang (16 February 1961 – 29 March 2013, aged 52) was a Chinese football player and coach. Fails GNG (Boneless Pizza!)
2024-05-24 12:24 Abdisalam Aato (Somali-American film director and producer) Abdisalam Aato (Somali: Cabdisalaan Caato; Arabic: عبد السلام عاتو) (born 1976) is a Somali-American film director, producer, entrepreneur and media consultant. He is the founder of Olol Films, a production company at the forefront of the Somaliwood movement within the Somali film industry. The subject of this article does not meet notability guidelines due to a lack of significant coverage in independent, reliable sources. (31.124.226.64)
2024-05-24 12:48 Ari Kurniawan (Indonesian footballer) Ari Kurniawan Sarwoto (born April 11, 1978) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a goalkeeper. This biography article has one failed verification reference, insufficient to establish notability. After searching, found social media for other same name people, but no comprehensive, in-depth coverage of this specific person. Article was created on 26 July 2012. (JoeNMLC)
2024-05-24 16:04 Ashok Kumar (field hockey, born 1966) (Indian field hockey player) Ashok Kumar (born 8 April 1966) is an Indian field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1988 Summer Olympics. Violates WP:SPORTSCRIT#4. No evidence of notability. Not mentioned at Field hockey at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament so that's not a suitable redirect target. (Pppery)
2024-05-24 17:07 Eric Basson (South African rugby union player) Eric Basson (born 29 April 2002) is a South African rugby union player for the Blue Bulls in the Currie Cup. His regular position is flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 17:18 Hentzwill Pedro (Rugby player) Hentzwill Nowellen Pedro (born 21 July 1987 in George, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played with the SWD Eagles. His regular position is winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 17:21 Nkosi Nofuma (Rugby player) Nkosikhona Nofuma (born 29 April 1988) is a South African professional rugby union player for the Griffons in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. He can play as a flanker, number eight or lock. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 18:42 Deon Scholtz (Rugby player) Deon Scholtz (born 12 September 1985) is a South African rugby union footballer. He plays mostly as a winger. He most recently represented the Pumas in the Currie Cup and Vodacom Cup. He has previously played for the Boland Cavaliers and Leopards. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 18:44 Adrian Vermeulen (Rugby player) Adrian De Wet Vermeulen (born (1990-10-17)17 October 1990) is a former South African professional rugby union player who played first class rugby with the Leopards in 2015 and 2016. His regular position was at centre, and he occasionally played as a winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 01:21 Brummer Badenhorst (South African rugby union player) Brummer Badenhorst (born 6 September 1990) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing for UP Tuks. His usual position is prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 16:58 Robert Fendrick (American bridge player) Robert "Bob" Fendrick (born 1948) is a two time North American Bridge Champion. Bob won the 2012 Senior Swiss and the 2024 Senior Pairs. No evidence of notability, I could not find any independent reliable sources about this bridge player. (Fram)
2024-05-25 06:45 Wiseman Kamanga (Rugby player) Fhumulani Wiseman Kamanga (born 14 November 1991 in Johannesburg, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played provincial rugby with Griquas. His regular position is loosehead prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 06:48 Robert de Bruyn (Rugby player) Robert James de Bruyn (born 26 February 1991, in Johannesburg) is a South African rugby union player. His regular position is centre. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 21:51 Brian Benison Brian Benison is an American musical artist. He is the leader of 5Choir, a Christian music group based in Fort Worth, Texas, United States. [BLP]
2024-05-25 17:07 Rasikendra Nath Nandi (A Vaishnav scholar, social reformer and a zamindar from erstwhile Pabna district, now in Bangladesh. He wrote several manuscripts explaining the Vaishnavism in simple Sanskrit.) Rasikendra Nath Nandi (Bengali: রসিকেন্দ্র নাথ নন্দী) (also known as Rasik Nandi) was a Vaishnav scholar, social reformer and zamindar. He was born in 1882 in the village of Bhat-bera in district Pabna of undivided Bengal (now in Sirajganj District, Bangladesh). Zero secondary sources found. Entire article is original research, purportedly based on an oral history interview which is not properly referenced. Does not meet WP:GNG. (Cielquiparle)
2024-05-25 06:43 Bocephus King (Canadian musician) Bocephus King is a Canadian indie musician from Vancouver. His discography includes Joco Music released in 1996 by Tonic Records, A Small Good Thing released in 1998 by New West Records, The Blue Sickness released in 2000 by Tonic Records, All Children Believe In Heaven released in 2004 by Tonic Records and Willie Dixon God Damn released in 2011 by Tonic Records. nothing to demonstrate notability. only includes a self-written bio as a source (FMSky)
2024-05-25 21:18 Dylon Frylinck (Rugby player) Dylon Frylinck (born 15 January 1992) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played for Griquas. He is a utility back, that mainly plays at scrum-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 22:26 June Juanico (Elvis Presley fan) June Juanico (born 19 November 1937) is a woman from Biloxi, Mississippi, whom the famous rock 'n' roll singer Elvis Presley dated in 1955 and 1956, for instance, when he took three weeks of vacation after having recorded his songs "Hound Dog" and "Don't Be Cruel" in the studio in New York City. Subject does not meet notability standards. (Strangerthings7112)
2024-05-26 01:27 Bobby Dyer (rugby union) (South African rugby union player) Robert James Dyer (born 4 December 1986 in Port Elizabeth) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with Eastern Province Grand Challenge club side Despatch. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-26 04:07 James Blair Down (Canadian citizen) James Blair Down is a Canadian citizen who operated a large telemarketing scam with others. On November 7, 1999, the CBS highly rated television show 60 Minutes aired an interview with Martin S. Kenney that was conducted by Mike Wallace as part of a program segment called Con Man that focused on Kenney's firm Interclaim, which worked in conjunction with the FBI to attempt to recover millions of dollars of investor funds stolen in the telemarking fraud by Blair Down. Some reliable sources but not enough for a full article. The fact that article is in obviously bad, unencyclopedic state, and has only been edited a handful of times in the last two decades, shows this person does not have much notability. (QueensanditsCrazy)
2024-05-26 18:20 Brendan Hector (Rugby player) Brendan Roberto Eden Hector (born 3 February 1993 in Graaff-Reinet) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the Eastern Province Kings. His regular position is lock. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-26 23:29 Teague McElroy (New Zealand rugby union player) Teague McElroy (born 4 March 1997 in New Zealand) is a New Zealand rugby union player who plays for North Harbour in the National Provincial Championship. His playing position is prop. I am unable to find enough coverage of the subject, a New Zealand rugby union player, to meet WP:GNG or WP:SPORTCRIT. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-27 06:07 Celtic Cross (band) (Band) Celtic Cross was a musical collaboration of Simon Posford (Hallucinogen, Shpongle), Martin Glover (bassist from Killing Joke) and Saul Davies (violinist from James). The style of music could be described as psychedelic rock, ambient and dub music with ethnic influences.[citation needed] The cover of the Hicksville album was designed by Mark Neal, the same artist who worked on Posford's Twisted and The Lone Deranger, as well as the Shpongle albums. Questionable notability, only a Discogs source (Risedemise)
2024-05-27 12:38 Claire Hardaker (costume designer) (British costume designer) Claire Hardaker is a British costume designer. She has worked on a number of notable films, including Kick-Ass 2, Prometheus, Dorian Gray, and The Queen. I can find nothing to indicate they are notable, and currently we have zero reliable sources (KylieTastic)
2024-05-27 20:57 Guillaume Besse (entrepreneur) (French businessman (born 1971)) Guillaume Besse (born 7 August 1971) is a French entrepreneur and venture capitalist. I don't think the notability criteria has been met. The article was created by an apparent COI editor. (Risedemise)
2024-05-27 23:14 Vince Gwavu (Rugby player) Lubabalo Vincent Gwavu (born 4 September 1987) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with club side QBR. His regular position is flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 14:34 Zack Cooper (American international relations scholar) Zack Cooper is an American national security and foreign policy analyst currently serving as a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), an adjunct assistant professor at Georgetown University, and a lecturer in Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. Not meeting notability for biographies, has been tagged for a year with no improvements. Sources are largely items written by the individual, so are primary. (Oaktree b)
2024-05-28 19:30 Qëndrim Ismajli (Kosovar professional footballer (born 1999)) Qëndrim Ismajli (born 23 May 1999) is a Kosovar professional footballer who plays as a Left-back for Football Superleague of Kosovo club Gjilani Seems like a case of WP:TOOSOON as I am struggling to find WP:SIGCOV on this Football Superleague of Kosovo player. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-27 14:23 James Earl (grazier) (Merchant, cartage and cattle breeder) James Earl (1874-1907) was a merchant in Far North Queensland of cartage and started cattle breeding. Fails WP:GNG, lacks any substantial coverage in mutiple sources or references. Unable to draftify as draft already exists. Mainly original research. (Dan arndt)
2024-05-28 20:38 Quinton Crocker (South African rugby union player) Quinton Crocker (born 26 June 1987) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with KwaZulu-Natal club side College Rovers. He is a utility back that can play at centre, full-back, fly-half or winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 22:25 Sino Nyoka (Rugby player) Sinoyuvo 'Snake' Nyoka (born 7 August 1990) is a South African rugby union player who last played for the Border Bulldogs in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is scrum-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 22:29 Dean Webb (Musical artist) Dean Webb (born Michael Eaton in 1940) is an English rock and roll singer, actor, and composer. Non-notable person. (TheTechie)
2024-05-28 22:30 Riaan Vermeulen (South African rugby union player) Riaan Vermeulen (born 3 August 1984) is a South African rugby union player. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 07:38 Jared Ravizza (American conspiracy theorist) Jared Ravizza, of Martha’s Vineyard, is an American conspiracy theorist and self-described model suspected of committing multiple stabbing incidents in the Boston area in May 2024. These include the stabbing of four underage girls at a movie theater in Braintree, Massachusetts and of two McDonald’s employees in Plymouth; Ravizza has been formally charged in court with the latter. WP:SUSPECT. (Fram)
2024-05-28 22:42 Luke Akehurst (British Politican, PR consultant, and member of the Labour Party NEC) Luke Akehurst (born 2 March 1972) is a British Labour party official, and former counciller. Since 2022, he has been a member of the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party, having also previously been on the NEC from 2010 untill 2012. Non-notable (TheTechie)
2024-05-28 23:42 Adam Nowell (British basketball player) Adam Nowell (born 3 July 1984 in Liverpool, England) is a British professional basketball player, currently playing for Everton Tigers in the British Basketball League. Non-notable minor league basketball player. No sources. (Fred Zepelin)
2024-05-29 00:08 Dean Grant (Rugby player) Dean Grant (born 18 March 1989 in Johannesburg, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the French Fédérale 1 side SO Chambéry. His regular position is fly-half. Sporting an uncanny resemblance to the Hollywood actor, Matt Damon, Dean is considered one of South Africa's sexiest sportsmen. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-29 00:17 Vakhtang Akhobadze (Rugby player) Vakhtangi Akhobadze (born 7 May 1993) is a professional rugby union player from Georgia. His position is Prop and he currently plays for Agen in the Top 14. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 22:25 Richard N. Holzapfel (American historian) Richard Charles Neitzel Holzapfel (born 1954) is a former professor of Church History and Doctrine at Brigham Young University (BYU) and an author on topics related to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), Western and Utah History, and the New Testament. person is not popular enough to have a wiki page (OxfordWolfson)

Culture/Biography/Women[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-26 02:16 Daphne Deloren (American meteorologist) Daphne Deloren is a meteorologist, working for places like CNN, NBC6, WNEM-TV5, WCTV, and KESQ. She began working for WSMV's 4WARN Weather team in June 2016. No indication of significant coverage for notability. (Sammi Brie)
2024-05-22 19:01 Repairing Rainbows (Canadian memoir of Lynda Fishman) Repairing Rainbows is a 2010 memoir by Lynda Fishman. The book is a true story of family, tragedy and choices. Article on a seemingly non-notable self-published book, created by an WP:SPA. Nearly all of the sources, including all of those being used as "reviews" are primary, being from the official website. Searches did not turn up any reviews or coverage of the book in reliable sources, making it a failure of the WP:GNG and WP:NBOOK. (Rorshacma)
2024-05-27 20:57 Carole Bienaimé (French film producer) Carole Bienaimé (also Carole Bienaimé-Besse), is a commissioner and board member of Conseil Supérieur de l'Audiovisuel, an independent agency of French government that regulates communications by radio, television, and internet platforms across France and all its territories. I don't think the notability criteria has been met. The article was created by an apparent COI editor. (Risedemise)
2024-05-28 16:22 Tahani Al-Yanbaawi (Saudi footballer (born 1995)) Tahani Kamal Al-Yonbaawi (Arabic: تهاني كمال الينبعاوي; born 1 October 1995) is a Saudi footballer who plays as a Defender for Saudi Women's Premier League's team Al Nassr. WP:TOOSOON for an article. No evidence of notability. All I found was this transactional announcement. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 23:01 Pat Barrington (American actress) Pat Barrington (born Patricia Annette Bray, October 16, 1939 – September 1, 2014) was a dancer and actress who appeared in the films Orgy of the Dead credited as Pat Barringer (1965, dir Stephen C. Apostolof, writer Edward D. Wood, Jr.), The Agony of Love (1966, Harry Novak) and Mondo Topless (1966, directed by Russ Meyer). Non-notable actress who specialized in sexploitation films. Almost every biographical detail is based on imdb. There is a small amount of content about her in two books about movie directors, in the context of the films they were directing. I cannot find any significant coverage. Has been tagged for notability since 2018. (Schazjmd)

Culture/Media[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 05:50 BOND (Database form building system) BOND (Building Object Network Databases) started development in late 2000 as a rapid application development tool for the GNOME Desktop by Treshna Enterprises. Its aim was to fill a gap that traditional Microsoft Windows applications like Borland Delphi, Microsoft Access and Visual Basic filled on the Windows desktop, but targeted for the Linux environment. No citations other than primary source, can't find any secondary references to it (Joy)
2024-05-23 13:35 Mike Gaston (British radio DJ) Mike Gaston (created 1949) is a broadcast journalist, peace builder and singer/songwriter living in Northern Ireland. Essentially someone's resume blown up to encyclopedia article. The sources are all very passing mentions if they mention him at all (the more in-depth ones don't). The ones that do are just WP:ROUTINE schedules and whatnot. I don't see the sort of significant coverage needed for WP:GNG (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-24 16:24 FVWM95 (window manager) FVWM95 is a window manager for the X Window System based on the popular FVWM 2 window manager. It is similar to the original FVWM, but is designed to closely resemble the look of Windows 95. Fails WP: N. I can't find anything outside of some brief mentions in a small handful of books and articles. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-25 22:26 June Juanico (Elvis Presley fan) June Juanico (born 19 November 1937) is a woman from Biloxi, Mississippi, whom the famous rock 'n' roll singer Elvis Presley dated in 1955 and 1956, for instance, when he took three weeks of vacation after having recorded his songs "Hound Dog" and "Don't Be Cruel" in the studio in New York City. Subject does not meet notability standards. (Strangerthings7112)
2024-05-26 04:07 James Blair Down (Canadian citizen) James Blair Down is a Canadian citizen who operated a large telemarketing scam with others. On November 7, 1999, the CBS highly rated television show 60 Minutes aired an interview with Martin S. Kenney that was conducted by Mike Wallace as part of a program segment called Con Man that focused on Kenney's firm Interclaim, which worked in conjunction with the FBI to attempt to recover millions of dollars of investor funds stolen in the telemarking fraud by Blair Down. Some reliable sources but not enough for a full article. The fact that article is in obviously bad, unencyclopedic state, and has only been edited a handful of times in the last two decades, shows this person does not have much notability. (QueensanditsCrazy)
2024-05-26 04:28 Songshark Songshark is a term for a dishonest music publisher, whose main source of income is the naivete of new songwriters, whom they charge for services a reputable publisher would provide free to their clients. Single blog post and expired domain for citations, editorial in nature, article has history of being dumping ground for unsourced, unvalidated accusations (Duckmonster)
2024-05-27 03:50 Velocify (company) Velocify, Inc. is a cloud computing company, headquartered in El Segundo, California, that provides cloud-based intelligent sales automation software designed for fast-paced sales environments. Fails the notability guideline for companies. Sources are either trivial (routine announcements of funding, name changes, product releases, acquisitions, or winning insignificant awards), non-independent, or unreliable (Forbes contributors). Checked for decent sources under both "Velocify" and "Leads360" and could not find any. (Teratix)
2024-05-27 19:44 Johnny Andrews (American songwriter and record producer) Johnny Andrews is an American songwriter and record producer based in Atlanta, Georgia, and Nashville, Tennessee. Andrews has written multiple number one singles, including "I Am Machine" and "Painkiller" by Three Days Grace, "Freak Like Me" by Halestorm, and "Stand Up" by All That Remains. Fails to meet notability guidelines as per WP:COMPOSER. Could only find a single article outside of the credits website and official website. (Leggomygreggo8)
2024-05-26 03:39 Prasoon Pandey (Indian film director) Prasoon Pandey is an Indian film director of advertising films. No sources besides IMDb. No claim of notability. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-28 16:29 Justice Waits (2005 book by Joel Davis) Justice Waits is a 2005 biography by Joel Davis about the 1980 murders of two UC Davis freshmen, John Riggins and Sabrina Gonsalves. Dubbed "The Sweetheart Murders", the case remained cold until August 27, 2002, when incriminating DNA evidence obtained from a blanket in the kidnappers' van proved that convicted child molester Richard Hirschfield was involved in the murders. Article is about a non-notable book. WP:BKCRIT (GranCavallo)
2024-05-28 18:07 Joshua Corin (American author and screenwriter) Joshua Corin is an American author and screenwriter. He is known for writing the novel Nuclear Winter Wonderland and a screenplay for the novel. Nuclear Winter Wonderland follows the story of an underachieving college kid, Adam Weiss, whose sister Anna is kidnapped by a lunatic nuclear terrorist. Doesn't seem to be notable. None notable award and non-notable book (was deleted for being non-notable in an AfD. Cannot find reliable third party sources for their notability. (Canterbury Tail)
2024-05-28 21:02 Babel Middleware (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory language interoperability software) Babel is an open source middleware system serving the scientific computing community. As a language interoperability tool, Babel enables the arbitrary mixing of software libraries written in C/C++, Fortran, Python, and Java. As a distributed computing platform, Babel provides a language-neutral Remote Method Invocation (RMI) scheme similar to Java's RMI which allows third-party plug-ins to specify custom data encodings and network protocols. Fails WP: N. I can't find any sources that are secondary and cover the subject with enough depth to establish notability. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:06 DSPnano RTOS (Computer operating system) DSPnano is an embedded real-time operating system (RTOS) which is compatible with POSIX and embedded Linux. It was first created in 1996 and was one of the first pthread based real-time kernels. Its entire focus was on tiny real-time digital signal processing systems and has been optimized to deliver high performance DSP on embedded digital signal controllers and digital signal processors [2]. I cannot find any adequate sources discussing this operating system other than very brief mentions in stuff like "list of every operating system." The creator of the article also is the CEO of the company that made this making it an advertisement. (Schützenpanzer)
2024-05-28 22:26 FVWM-Crystal FVWM-Crystal is a theme framework for the FVWM window manager. It uses GUI tools to edit the look of windows, instead of the use of editing a text file in FVWM. It creates a desktop environment using FVWM as its window manager and main core. Fails WP: N. I can't find any reliable secondary sources that give this library more than a passing mention. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:29 Dean Webb (Musical artist) Dean Webb (born Michael Eaton in 1940) is an English rock and roll singer, actor, and composer. Non-notable person. (TheTechie)

Culture/Media/Books[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 19:01 Repairing Rainbows (Canadian memoir of Lynda Fishman) Repairing Rainbows is a 2010 memoir by Lynda Fishman. The book is a true story of family, tragedy and choices. Article on a seemingly non-notable self-published book, created by an WP:SPA. Nearly all of the sources, including all of those being used as "reviews" are primary, being from the official website. Searches did not turn up any reviews or coverage of the book in reliable sources, making it a failure of the WP:GNG and WP:NBOOK. (Rorshacma)

Culture/Media/Films[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-27 12:38 Claire Hardaker (costume designer) (British costume designer) Claire Hardaker is a British costume designer. She has worked on a number of notable films, including Kick-Ass 2, Prometheus, Dorian Gray, and The Queen. I can find nothing to indicate they are notable, and currently we have zero reliable sources (KylieTastic)
2024-05-28 23:59 Dead Right (film) (1993 British film) Dead Right is an early short film by Edgar Wright, later famous for the TV programme Spaced and the film Shaun of the Dead. It was filmed in 1992 and 1993 in his hometown of Wells, England when Wright was only 18. He wrote, edited, produced and directed the film as well as shooting and recording the sound. Doesn't meet Wikipedia Notability requirements (WP:NFILM), no unused RS appears discoverable on Google. Hasn't been improved despite having been tagged for a >15 years. (Rambling Rambler)

Culture/Media/Music[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 02:35 Purrkur Pillnikk (Icelandic rock band) Purrkur Pillnikk ('Sleepy Chess-Player') was a rock band from late punk era in Iceland. The band existed for 18 months (1981–1982) and were very active as they released at least two LPs, one live-album and two EPs. The distinguishable character of the band were Einar Örn's howling and off-key singing and his lyrics that most often described very day-to-day things but with a lot of interwoven angst. Lack of notability (Revirvlkodlaku)
2024-05-24 21:51 Brian Benison Brian Benison is an American musical artist. He is the leader of 5Choir, a Christian music group based in Fort Worth, Texas, United States. [BLP]
2024-05-25 06:43 Bocephus King (Canadian musician) Bocephus King is a Canadian indie musician from Vancouver. His discography includes Joco Music released in 1996 by Tonic Records, A Small Good Thing released in 1998 by New West Records, The Blue Sickness released in 2000 by Tonic Records, All Children Believe In Heaven released in 2004 by Tonic Records and Willie Dixon God Damn released in 2011 by Tonic Records. nothing to demonstrate notability. only includes a self-written bio as a source (FMSky)
2024-05-25 22:38 Jerry Jones Guitars (guitar manufacturing company based in Nashville, United States) Jerry Jones Guitars was a musical instrument manufacturer (mostly guitars) based in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Fails WP:GNG. Long-term unsourced article on a non-notable company. I can find no significant coverage, just trivial mentions in lists of gear people used at one time or another. (Mbinebri)
2024-05-25 23:02 KxK Guitars KxK (also spelt KXK and Kxk) Guitars, established in 1997, is a guitar company whose specialty lies mainly in custom guitars for heavy metal artists. All their instruments are made in the United States and are handcrafted. The company will start doing a new KK Downing signature series. Fails WP:GNG. No sources given and all I can find are a few press announcements for a signature model guitar - no significant coverage of the company. (Mbinebri)
2024-05-26 11:35 Oktober Guitars (American manufacturer of guitars and other instruments) Oktober Guitars Inc. (formerly October Guitars) was an American manufacturer of guitars and other instruments, based in Baltimore, Maryland. The company was founded by Tony Leicht, who was also the head luthier. Fails WP:GNG. "Oktober Guitars" returns a few results in guitar-related publications but it's all just press releases announcing new guitars, as is the case with the sources here. I can find no significant coverage of the company. Seems non-notable. (Mbinebri)
2024-05-26 11:48 Switch Music company (brand of electric guitars and electric basses) Switch was a brand of electric guitars and electric basses that featured a one-piece body-and-neck construction, made by injection moulding of a patented polyurethane resin-based synthetic material called Vibracell, very similar to Cort's Luthite. The brand belonged to the short-lived Switch Music company in the mid-2000s. Fails WP:GNG. Refs are a product catalog and a Youtube vid. I can't find anything on this company on Google - not even a company homepage. Looks entirely non-notable. (Mbinebri)
2024-05-26 20:20 Saint Blues Guitar Workshop (Memphis-based guitar manufacturer) Saint Blues Guitar Workshop is a Memphis, Tennessee manufacturer of boutique electric guitars. The company was born out of the custom guitar division of Strings & Things Music store in Memphis, but originally only lasted for a five-year run in the 1980s. Fails WP:GNG. Article is basically an ad for the company. Sources are a company brochure and a press release. Google turns up another press release and nothing else. No significant coverage that I could find to establish notability. (Mbinebri)
2024-05-27 02:40 Modern tango (Musical genre) Modern tango music (or contemporary tango) includes several different types of tango. This article does not cite any sources and barely describes its subject beyond clarifying what it does not entail (TheCrimsonKing'sCourt)
2024-05-27 06:07 Celtic Cross (band) (Band) Celtic Cross was a musical collaboration of Simon Posford (Hallucinogen, Shpongle), Martin Glover (bassist from Killing Joke) and Saul Davies (violinist from James). The style of music could be described as psychedelic rock, ambient and dub music with ethnic influences.[citation needed] The cover of the Hicksville album was designed by Mark Neal, the same artist who worked on Posford's Twisted and The Lone Deranger, as well as the Shpongle albums. Questionable notability, only a Discogs source (Risedemise)
2024-05-23 20:58 Khusugtun (Mongolian Musical Ensemble) Khusugtun is a musical ensemble from Mongolia that plays music inspired by traditional Mongolian music. The group has released 2 albums and notably performed at the 2011 BBC Proms. In 2015, the group came in second place in the first season of Asia's Got Talent. Insufficient sourcing for WP:MUSIC or WP:GNG; mentioned in BBC documentary and brief mention as contentants on reality show (Ohnoitsjamie)
2024-05-28 17:43 Vester Guitars (trademark) Vester was a musical instrument brand specialised in guitars and amplifiers, formed as a part of retail company "Samuel Music" based in Effingham, Illinois. Fails WP:GNG. The two available sources are on Vester's non-notable parent company, not Vester itself. Google News returns one mention of the brand in a guitarist interview with a non-RS source and a search of Guitar World's site returns one hit that lists the brand in a recap of a Youtube video - there aren't even the usual PR releases! I don't see this being a notable company. (Mbinebri)

Culture/Media/Radio[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-26 09:41 KESU-LP (Radio station in Lihue, Hawaii) KESU-LP (94.9 FM, "K-Iesu Radio 94.9M") is a radio station licensed to serve the community of Lihue, Hawaii. The station is owned by Calvary Chapel Lihue. It airs a Christian radio format. No secondary sources to demonstrate notability. Fails WP:GNG. (AusLondonder)

Culture/Media/Software[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 19:36 Datacoup (New York based start up company) Datacoup was a New York-based start up company that provides a marketplace for individuals to sell a feed of their personal data, such as social media activity and credit card transactions, to information brokers for a monthly fee. In November 2019, Datacoup issued an email to users stating that it was shutting down operations and will be decommissioning all of its servers. Doesn't seem to meet WP:CORP, all coverage was just of the launch of the company, no sustained media interest. Its closure apparently wasn't even reported on. (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-23 02:35 Barco ColorTone Barco ColorTone was a stripped-down version of the Barco Creator image manipulation program. It was originally developed for IRIX, and only featured the base "CT-Brix", brush and colour correction modules. An additional "image quality estimator" module, not featured in Creator, was also added. Fails WP: N -- if de-PRODing, please add multiple independent sources that cover the subject in-depth. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 04:21 Yoix (high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming language) In computer programming, Yoix is a high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, object-based, dynamic programming language. The Yoix interpreter is implemented using standard Java technology without any add-on packages and requires only a Sun-compliant JVM to operate.[citation needed] Fails WP: N. The paper that proposed the language doesn't have any citations that could establish notability. There are also some potential WP: COI concerns on the Talk page, but sourcing is the main issue here. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 15:35 Little Smalltalk (non-standard dialect of the Smalltalk programming language) Little Smalltalk is a non-standard dialect and runtime system, a virtual machine referred to as "system", of the Smalltalk-80 programming language implemented by Timothy Budd at University of Arizona in 1984 along with a group of his students. It was originally described in a book "A Little Smalltalk" (1987), and was created as result of lack of cheap access to Smalltalk-80 runtime at the time; it was initially intended to run on Unix on a VAX-780. Fails WP: N. I did a quick scan through the citations of Budd's original paper where this language was proposed, and I couldn't find anything that would establish notability. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 22:46 Pocket Smalltalk (Smalltalk environment) Pocket Smalltalk is a Smalltalk environment that runs in Microsoft Windows and cross-compiles on the Palm Pilot platform. Fails WP: N. I can't find anything about this subject aside from a few brief mentions in some books. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 22:42 Sakura HyperMedia Desktop (Open source dektop environment) Sakura HyperMedia Desktop is an open source desktop environment and knowledge navigator for Unix. It is written in scripting languages such as Python and Tcl, and therefore runs on a variety of platforms. The Sakura HyperMedia Desktop Project lists the main features as follows: Fails WP: N. I can't find any sources that would establish notability. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-23 14:46 Dalim Tango (Dalim's product for colour retouching during the 1990s) Dalim Tango was a color retouching package aimed at the repro and prepress markets. It ran on Silicon Graphics workstations, and was first released in 1993. This retouching package is still available in the DALiM LiTHO program. As of 2013, LiTHO version 7 is available for both Linux and Mac OS X operating systems. Fails WP: N. I can't find anything outside of a mention in a magazine in 1993. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-26 16:31 XFast (Desktop environment) XFast is a lightweight desktop environment that incorporates a display manager and a window manager within the same process. It is portable and works on many devices (embedded devices, handhelds, set-top boxes,...). Here the communication between server layer and desktop layer can be made in classical way via TCP/IP but depending on the configuration and target system it can be done via shared memory too. This desktop environment doesn't meet WP:GNG at all. Zero WP:SIGCOV is available. (24.153.57.64)
2024-05-27 05:39 JOnAS (application server) JOnAS is an open-source implementation of the Java EE application server specification, developed and hosted by the OW2 consortium, having been originally been created by Groupe Bull. JOnAS is released under the LGPL 2.1 open-source license. Fails WP:NSOFT (90.167.219.246)
2024-05-24 02:00 F-Script (programming language) (object-oriented scripting programming language for Apple's macOS operating system) F-Script is an object-oriented scripting programming language for Apple's macOS operating system developed by Philippe Mougin. F-Script is an interactive language based on Smalltalk, using macOS's native Cocoa API. Fails WP: N. I found a passing mention in a book, but nothing more than that. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 23:57 Ambient (desktop environment) (MUI-based desktop environment for MorphOS) Ambient is a MUI-based desktop environment for MorphOS. Its development was started in 2001 by David Gerber. Its main goals were that it should be fully asynchronous, simple and fast. Ambient remotely resembles Workbench and Directory Opus Magellan trying to mix the best of both worlds. Fails WP: N. Aside from one brief mention in a book, I couldn't find any secondary coverage. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-27 13:36 Zingaya Zingaya was launched in North America on September 14, 2010 at the DEMO conference.[citation needed] Zingaya provides next generation click-to-call services. Using Adobe Flash-based Voice over Internet Protocol technology, the company provides an embedded widget that forwards an end user through a VoIP call to landlines, mobile phones, Skype accounts, or other computers – whichever the website operator has specified. Fails the notability guideline for companies. (Teratix)
2024-05-28 20:13 Apache Yetus Apache Yetus is a collection of libraries and tools that enable contribution and release processes for software projects. Portions are used by a wide variety of Apache projects, including Apache Hadoop and Apache HBase. Fails WP: N. I could only find a self-published tutorial on how to use Yetus for a specific use case, but this isn't necessarily reliable. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 20:21 AdaControl (Open source software) AdaControl is a free (GMGPL) tool that detects the use of various kinds of constructs in Ada programs. Its first goal is to control proper usage of style or programming rules, but it can also be used as a powerful tool to search for use (or non-use) of various forms of programming styles or design patterns. Fails WP: N. I can't find any sources that meet the criteria to establish notability, and all of the sources on the article at the time of PRODing are primary. I found one paper that uses the code to test a source code quality metric, but one of the authors is affiliate with Adalog. I couldn't find anything else that could establish notability -- if dePRODing, please provide better sourcing and add it to the article. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:30 K Desktop Environment 3 (Free software) K Desktop Environment 3 is the third series of releases of the K Desktop Environment (after that called KDE Software Compilation). There are six major releases in this series. After the release of KDE 4, version 3.5 was forked into the Trinity Desktop Environment. Fails WP: N. I found some self-published articles about KDE3, but nothing more. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:34 LUnix (Operating system) ± I could find no adequate coverage of this operating system in order to justify an article on it. Any mentions found were brief mentions mostly just copied from this article or a deluge of a people misspelling Linux, even in books. (Schützenpanzer)

Culture/Media/Television[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-23 01:20 WJTS-CD (Television station in Indiana, United States) WJTS-CD, virtual channel 18 (UHF digital channel 24), is a low-powered YTA TV-affiliated television station licensed to Jasper, Indiana, United States. The station is owned by DC Broadcasting, and airs a mixture of family programming, local sports, public affairs and children's programming. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-23 03:16 WKUG-LP (Television station in Kentucky, United States (2002–2007)) WKUG-LP, UHF analog channel 62, was a low-power TBN-affiliated television station licensed to Glasgow, Kentucky, United States. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-24 09:39 WIRE-CD (Television station in Georgia, United States) WIRE-CD, virtual and UHF digital channel 33, is a low-power, Class A television station licensed to Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Its analog broadcast range reached into the inner suburbs. Previously an MTV2 affiliate, programming since digital conversion now consists entirely of infomercials. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-24 23:51 KDKZ-LD (Television station in Missouri, United States) KDKZ-LD, virtual and UHF digital channel 18, is a low-power AMGTV-affiliated television station licensed to Farmington, Missouri, United States and serving the northwestern parts of the Cape Girardeau, Missouri/Paducah, Kentucky market, and the southernmost part of the St. Louis market. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-26 00:18 WHDC-LD (Television station in Charleston, South Carolina) WHDC-LD, virtual and VHF digital channel 12, is a low-power Court TV-affiliated television station licensed to Charleston, South Carolina, United States. The station is owned by Marquee Broadcasting Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-26 01:52 WJKF-CD (TV station in Jacksonville, Florida) WJKF-CD (channel 9) is a low-power, Class A NTD America television station in Jacksonville, Florida, United States. Owned by Abacus Television, the station maintains transmitter facilities on Newton Road on Jacksonville's east side. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-26 05:06 WHBH-CD (Class A low-power TV station in Booneville, Mississippi) WHBH-CD (channel 34) is a low-power, Class A independent television station in Booneville, Mississippi, United States. The station is owned by 5GTV, LLC. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-26 05:41 WTZT-CD (Television station in Alabama, United States) WTZT-CD, virtual and VHF digital channel 11, branded on-air as ZTV11, is a low-powered, Class A Cozi TV-affiliated television station licensed to Athens, Alabama, United States. Founded on November 2, 1988, the station is owned by Jamie Cooper and wife Gloria, both of whom also host a morning show on the station. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-26 12:33 WHDT-LD (LPTV station in Boston) WHDT-LD (channel 3) is a low-power television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It transmits from atop the Prudential Tower. The station is one of three stations operated by WHDT World Television Service (DE), a business unit of Marksteiner AG. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)

Culture/Media/Video games[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-24 05:01 Word Up (video game) (computer pub game popular in the UK) Word Up also known as Word Soup is a popular SWP (skill with prize) game. Located on the itbox and other terminals, the game was developed by Big Fizz Games. lack of notability (Waxworker)
2024-05-28 22:36 Evil Empire (company) Evil Empire is a French video game developer based in Bordeaux, France. The company was created in 2019 by former Motion Twin employees to provide long term support for Dead Cells, and to let the former company focus on developing new IPs. Evil Empire worked on DLC and updates for Dead Cells until 2024, then launching its first original title, The Rogue Prince of Persia in early access. Potentially un-notable dev. (TheTechie)

Culture/Philosophy and religion[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-25 19:58 Shri Datta Venkata Sai Temple The Shri Datta Venkata Sai Temple in Kalloor, India is a replica of the Shirdi Sai Baba temple built by Prabhakar Maharaj. No indication of its existence. Likely not notable otherwise. (OzzyOlly)
2024-05-26 04:52 John Drane (British theologian) John William Drane is a Christian theologian and author. No references besides personal websites. No claim of notability. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-28 22:25 Richard N. Holzapfel (American historian) Richard Charles Neitzel Holzapfel (born 1954) is a former professor of Church History and Doctrine at Brigham Young University (BYU) and an author on topics related to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), Western and Utah History, and the New Testament. person is not popular enough to have a wiki page (OxfordWolfson)

Culture/Sports[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 00:57 Wynand Pienaar (South African rugby union player) Wynand Christo Pienaar (born 5 August 1989) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the Griffons. His regular position is fullback. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 14:55 Welsh Ladies Indoor Bowling Association The Welsh Ladies Indoor Bowling Association (WLIBA) (formed 1950) is the governing body for the indoor bowling clubs in Wales. It has 25 affiliated clubs. The WLIBA organise national competitions and select and manage the national side. Lacking secondary sources. Fails WP:ORGCRIT. (AusLondonder)
2024-05-22 17:31 Chuma Faas (South African rugby union player) Chuma Sean Kenosi Faas (born 22 January 1990 in Port Elizabeth, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played with the Eastern Province Kings. His regular position is scrum-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 17:33 Michael Bernardt (South African rugby union player) Michael Rudger Gerardus Bernardt (born 19 March 1993) is a South African professional rugby union player, who most recently played with the Eastern Province Kings. His regular position is centre, but he can also play as a fly-half or winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 17:39 Leo Kruger (rugby union) (Rugby player) Leo-Roubert Kruger (born (1997-07-11)11 July 1997) is a South African rugby union player for the Golden Lions in the Currie Cup and the Golden Lions XV in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 01:51 Johan Jackson (Rugby player) Johan Jackson (born 24 January 1987) is a South African rugby union footballer. He plays either as an outside-centre or a winger. He represents the Pumas in the Currie Cup and Vodacom Cup, having previously played for the Blue Bulls, Valke and Golden Lions. Poorly sourced rugby BLP with no evidence of notability. Fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT due to lack of independent coverage available online. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 02:10 Minenhle Mthethwa (Rugby player) Minenhle Lethuxolo Mthethwa (born 5 August 1991) is a South African professional rugby union player who most recently played with the Eastern Province Kings. He usually plays as a winger, but can also play as an outside centre. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 02:12 Lance Louw (rugby union) (Rugby player) Lance Louw (born (1990-06-28)28 June 1990) is a South African rugby union player. His regular position is wing. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 02:14 Lindokuhle Welemu (Rugby player) Lindokuhle Welemu (born (1991-04-29)29 April 1991 in South Africa) is a South African rugby union player for the Griffons (rugby union) in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is lock. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 06:33 Wesley Cloete (South African rugby union player) Wesley Wyndham Cloete (born 8 February 1990) is a South African rugby union player. His regular position is prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 06:39 Dale Sabbagh (South African rugby union player) Dale Gavin Sabbagh (born 2 February 1991) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with Border Super League side Old Selbornians. His regular position is fly-half or full-back. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 15:01 Mikke Van Hool Mikke Van Hool (born 5 November 1967) is a Belgian former racing driver and racing team owner, who most recently drove at the Belgian GT Championship in 2008. Prior to this, he raced in the International Formula 3000 Championship with the team Astromega, which he also became manager for after 1995. Does not meet WP:GNG--coverage is limited to database entries and photographs, no secondary RS appear to be available. I found a mere-mention in an F1 memoir [3], but that's not enough coverage for a biography. (Rosguill)
2024-05-23 14:05 List of ESPN Latin America announcers The commentators teams of selected major sports and SportsCenter anchors of the Latin American networks of ESPN International, such as ESPN, ESPN 2, ESPN 3, ESPN+, ESPN Brasil and ESPN Caribbean. WP:LISTN not met; completely unsourced. (Let'srun)
2024-05-23 19:10 Clyde Davids (South African rugby union player) Clyde Eathan Davids (born 17 April 1993) is a South African professional rugby union player who last played for the Blue Bulls in the Currie Cup. His regular position is number eight or flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 19:15 Helmut Lehmann (rugby union) (Rugby player) Helmut Lehmann is a former South African rugby union player, that played for Western Province in the Currie Cup and Vodacom Cup. His usual position is flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 19:23 Logan Basson (South African rugby union player) Logan Andrew Basson (born 9 March 1989) is a South African professional rugby union player who last played for Western Province in the Rugby Challenge. He is a utility back that can play as a full-back, winger or fly-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 20:41 Christian Rust (Rugby player) Hendri Christian Rust (born 7 April 1992) is a South African rugby union player for El Salvador in the División de Honor in Spain. His regular position is fly-half, but he can also play outside centre or fullback. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 07:29 Liu Kang (footballer) (Chinese footballer and coach) Liu Kang (16 February 1961 – 29 March 2013, aged 52) was a Chinese football player and coach. Fails GNG (Boneless Pizza!)
2024-05-24 12:48 Ari Kurniawan (Indonesian footballer) Ari Kurniawan Sarwoto (born April 11, 1978) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a goalkeeper. This biography article has one failed verification reference, insufficient to establish notability. After searching, found social media for other same name people, but no comprehensive, in-depth coverage of this specific person. Article was created on 26 July 2012. (JoeNMLC)
2024-05-24 13:38 Megas Alexandros Irakleia F.C. (Football club) Megas Alexandros Football Club is a Greek football club, based in Irakleia, Serres. Non-notable low tier football club which has been unreferenced since its creation in 2010 and tagged as such since 2012. (Hey man im josh)
2024-05-24 13:44 Aetoloacarnania Football Clubs Association (Greek football team) The Aetoloacarnania Football Clubs Association (AFCA) (Ένωση Ποδοσφαιρικών Σωματείων Αιτωλοακαρνανίας, ΕΠΣΑΙΤΩΛ = Enosi Podosfairikon Somateion Aetoloacarnanias, EPSAITOL) is a football (soccer) organization in the Aetolia-Acarnania region that is part of the Greek Football Federation. Non-notable amateur football club. Unreferenced since its creation in 2015. (Hey man im josh)
2024-05-24 13:45 Evros Football Clubs Association (governing body of association football in the Greek prefecture of Evros) Evros Football Clubs Association or EPS Evros (Greek: Ένωση Ποδοσφαιρικών Σωματείων Έβρου, ΕΠΣ Έβρου) is a union representing the football teams from the Greek regional unit of Evros. Its headquarters are in Alexandroupoli. Non-notable local amateur football club which has been unreferenced since its creation in 2008. (Hey man im josh)
2024-05-24 13:47 Aetos Skydra F.C. (Football club) Aetos F.C. (Greek: Α.Σ. Αετός Σκύδρας) was a Greek football club, based in Skydra, Greece. Non-notable amateur football club which has been unreferenced since its creation in 2010. (Hey man im josh)
2024-05-24 16:04 Ashok Kumar (field hockey, born 1966) (Indian field hockey player) Ashok Kumar (born 8 April 1966) is an Indian field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1988 Summer Olympics. Violates WP:SPORTSCRIT#4. No evidence of notability. Not mentioned at Field hockey at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament so that's not a suitable redirect target. (Pppery)
2024-05-24 17:07 Eric Basson (South African rugby union player) Eric Basson (born 29 April 2002) is a South African rugby union player for the Blue Bulls in the Currie Cup. His regular position is flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 17:18 Hentzwill Pedro (Rugby player) Hentzwill Nowellen Pedro (born 21 July 1987 in George, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played with the SWD Eagles. His regular position is winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 17:21 Nkosi Nofuma (Rugby player) Nkosikhona Nofuma (born 29 April 1988) is a South African professional rugby union player for the Griffons in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. He can play as a flanker, number eight or lock. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 18:42 Deon Scholtz (Rugby player) Deon Scholtz (born 12 September 1985) is a South African rugby union footballer. He plays mostly as a winger. He most recently represented the Pumas in the Currie Cup and Vodacom Cup. He has previously played for the Boland Cavaliers and Leopards. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 18:44 Adrian Vermeulen (Rugby player) Adrian De Wet Vermeulen (born (1990-10-17)17 October 1990) is a former South African professional rugby union player who played first class rugby with the Leopards in 2015 and 2016. His regular position was at centre, and he occasionally played as a winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 01:21 Brummer Badenhorst (South African rugby union player) Brummer Badenhorst (born 6 September 1990) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing for UP Tuks. His usual position is prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 06:45 Wiseman Kamanga (Rugby player) Fhumulani Wiseman Kamanga (born 14 November 1991 in Johannesburg, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played provincial rugby with Griquas. His regular position is loosehead prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 06:48 Robert de Bruyn (Rugby player) Robert James de Bruyn (born 26 February 1991, in Johannesburg) is a South African rugby union player. His regular position is centre. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 21:18 Dylon Frylinck (Rugby player) Dylon Frylinck (born 15 January 1992) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played for Griquas. He is a utility back, that mainly plays at scrum-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-26 01:27 Bobby Dyer (rugby union) (South African rugby union player) Robert James Dyer (born 4 December 1986 in Port Elizabeth) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with Eastern Province Grand Challenge club side Despatch. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-26 18:20 Brendan Hector (Rugby player) Brendan Roberto Eden Hector (born 3 February 1993 in Graaff-Reinet) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the Eastern Province Kings. His regular position is lock. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-26 23:29 Teague McElroy (New Zealand rugby union player) Teague McElroy (born 4 March 1997 in New Zealand) is a New Zealand rugby union player who plays for North Harbour in the National Provincial Championship. His playing position is prop. I am unable to find enough coverage of the subject, a New Zealand rugby union player, to meet WP:GNG or WP:SPORTCRIT. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 14:09 2017 Mayaguez FC season Abandoned article. No encyclopaedic value. (Cloudz679)
2024-05-24 18:03 Capital 3 (Football league) Capital 3 is a football league competition under Capital Football, the governing body for football in the Wellington region of New Zealand. It is the third tier of the league system within Capital Football, sitting below Capital Premier and Capital 2. Amateur regional football league in New Zealand with no evidence of notability. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-27 23:14 Vince Gwavu (Rugby player) Lubabalo Vincent Gwavu (born 4 September 1987) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with club side QBR. His regular position is flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 08:43 2019 Liga 1 U-16 (Football tournament season) The 2019 Liga 1 U-16 (known as the Super Soccer TV Elite Pro Academy Liga 1 U-16 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was the second season of the Liga 1 Elite Pro Academy U-16. The league is currently the youth level (U-16) football league in Indonesia. The season started on 19 April and finished with a final on 6 October 2019. Per Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/2022 Liga 1 U-16. (Geschichte)
2024-05-28 16:22 Tahani Al-Yanbaawi (Saudi footballer (born 1995)) Tahani Kamal Al-Yonbaawi (Arabic: تهاني كمال الينبعاوي; born 1 October 1995) is a Saudi footballer who plays as a Defender for Saudi Women's Premier League's team Al Nassr. WP:TOOSOON for an article. No evidence of notability. All I found was this transactional announcement. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 19:30 Qëndrim Ismajli (Kosovar professional footballer (born 1999)) Qëndrim Ismajli (born 23 May 1999) is a Kosovar professional footballer who plays as a Left-back for Football Superleague of Kosovo club Gjilani Seems like a case of WP:TOOSOON as I am struggling to find WP:SIGCOV on this Football Superleague of Kosovo player. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 20:38 Quinton Crocker (South African rugby union player) Quinton Crocker (born 26 June 1987) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with KwaZulu-Natal club side College Rovers. He is a utility back that can play at centre, full-back, fly-half or winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 22:25 Sino Nyoka (Rugby player) Sinoyuvo 'Snake' Nyoka (born 7 August 1990) is a South African rugby union player who last played for the Border Bulldogs in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is scrum-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 22:30 Riaan Vermeulen (South African rugby union player) Riaan Vermeulen (born 3 August 1984) is a South African rugby union player. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 23:42 Adam Nowell (British basketball player) Adam Nowell (born 3 July 1984 in Liverpool, England) is a British professional basketball player, currently playing for Everton Tigers in the British Basketball League. Non-notable minor league basketball player. No sources. (Fred Zepelin)
2024-05-29 00:08 Dean Grant (Rugby player) Dean Grant (born 18 March 1989 in Johannesburg, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the French Fédérale 1 side SO Chambéry. His regular position is fly-half. Sporting an uncanny resemblance to the Hollywood actor, Matt Damon, Dean is considered one of South Africa's sexiest sportsmen. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-29 00:17 Vakhtang Akhobadze (Rugby player) Vakhtangi Akhobadze (born 7 May 1993) is a professional rugby union player from Georgia. His position is Prop and he currently plays for Agen in the Top 14. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)

Culture/Visual arts/Fashion[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-24 05:16 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2011 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2011 was the Forty-Third Mutya ng Pilipinas pageant, held at The Arena in San Juan, Metro Manila, Philippines, on December 2, 2011. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:26 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2012 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2012 was the Forty-Fourth Mutya ng Pilipinas pageant, held at the UP Theater in Diliman, Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines, on August 12, 2012. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:27 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2010 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2010, the 42nd edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on Aug. 28th, 2010 at Resorts World Manila Grand Theater in Newport City, Pasay, Metro Manila. Carla Jenina Lizardo, the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas Intercontinental 2010, Barbara Salvador, Mutya ng Pilipinas Tourism International 2010 and Christi McGarry named as Mutya ng Pilipinas Asia Pacific 2010. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing but one is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:29 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2009 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2009, the 41st edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on Aug. 9th, 2009 in Baler, Aurora. Jane Bañares, the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas International 2009 and Jacqueline Schubert named as Mutya ng Pilipinas Tourism (Aurora) 2009. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing but one is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:31 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2002 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2002, the 34th edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on June 8, 2002 with Miriam Chui proclaimed as the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas Asia Pacific who bested 23 other candidates. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and the single source is still from a non reliable pageant blog, adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:32 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2003 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2003 was the 35th Mutya ng Pilipinas pageant, held on May 31, 2003. Jamie Liz Castillo proclaimed as the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas Asia Pacific who bested 23 other candidates. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and the single source is still from a non reliable pageant blog, adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:39 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2008 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2008, the 40th edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on Dec. 7th, 2008 in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan. Jonavi Raisa Quiray, the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas International 2008 and Jam Charish Libatog named as Mutya ng Pilipinas Tourism Puerto Princesa 2008. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing but one is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-26 20:23 Mister Chile (National male beauty pageant competition in Chile) Mister Chile is a national beauty pageant that selects Chile's representative to the male pageants. The Ft Model Chile organizes the pageant since 2009. Felipe Toledo Gaete is the current director of the Mister Chile competition. One source, a bunch of dubious tables; as it stands it's a violation of WP:NOT, representative of a fansite at best. Restarting per WP:TNT is the best option for this poor article. (Bri)
2024-05-28 17:05 Miss Universe Cambodia 2023 (Beauty pageant) Miss Universe Cambodia 2023 was the 5th edition of the Miss Universe Cambodia pageant which was held on September 7, 2023, in Phnom Penh. Sotheary By Miss Universe Cambodia 2017 crowned Sotima John as her successor at the end of the event. Notability of this event has not been established as per WP:GNG. One or two non-primary sources are not sufficient. (Bri)

Geography/Geographical[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-24 15:26 Isle of the Mohawks (island in the Mohawk River in Schenectady County, New York, United States) Isle of the Mohawks is an island on the Mohawk River south of Scotia in Schenectady County, New York. Fails WP:NATFEAT. "Named natural features are often notable, provided information beyond statistics and coordinates is known to exist. [...] If a Wikipedia article cannot be developed using known sources, information on the feature can instead be included in a more general article on local geography. For example, a river island with no information available except name and location should probably be described in an article on the river". The small island seems to be of little significance, with no hope of expanding it to an encyclopedic article. (Geschichte)
2024-05-24 23:48 Hanson Ferry, Washington (Ghost town in Washington (state)) Hanson Ferry was a town in Asotin County, Washington. The GNIS classifies it as a populated place. This was never anything but the site of a post office. [4] Refer to the top of page 698. (James.folsom)
2024-05-27 21:58 Tunnicliff Hill (Mountain in New York, United States) Tunnicliff Hill is a mountain located in Central New York region of New York by Snowdon, New York. Fails WP:NATFEAT. "Named natural features are often notable, provided information beyond statistics and coordinates is known to exist. [...] If a Wikipedia article cannot be developed using known sources, information on the feature can instead be included in a more general article on local geography. For example, a river island with no information available except name and location should probably be described in an article on the river". The small hill seems to be of little significance, with no hope of expanding it to an encyclopedic article. (Geschichte)

Geography/Regions/Africa[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-24 12:24 Abdisalam Aato (Somali-American film director and producer) Abdisalam Aato (Somali: Cabdisalaan Caato; Arabic: عبد السلام عاتو) (born 1976) is a Somali-American film director, producer, entrepreneur and media consultant. He is the founder of Olol Films, a production company at the forefront of the Somaliwood movement within the Somali film industry. The subject of this article does not meet notability guidelines due to a lack of significant coverage in independent, reliable sources. (31.124.226.64)
2024-05-28 16:42 ENPI Italy–Tunisia CBC Programme The ENPI CBC Italy-Tunisia Programme is a European cooperation programme. It is part of the European Strategy 2007-2013 for Cross-border cooperation of the European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP), implemented in the context of the enlargement of the European Union. Fails GNG. Nothing in Google news, newspapers or books. (LibStar)

Geography/Regions/Africa/Northern Africa[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 05:50 BOND (Database form building system) BOND (Building Object Network Databases) started development in late 2000 as a rapid application development tool for the GNOME Desktop by Treshna Enterprises. Its aim was to fill a gap that traditional Microsoft Windows applications like Borland Delphi, Microsoft Access and Visual Basic filled on the Windows desktop, but targeted for the Linux environment. No citations other than primary source, can't find any secondary references to it (Joy)

Geography/Regions/Africa/Southern Africa[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 00:57 Wynand Pienaar (South African rugby union player) Wynand Christo Pienaar (born 5 August 1989) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the Griffons. His regular position is fullback. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 17:31 Chuma Faas (South African rugby union player) Chuma Sean Kenosi Faas (born 22 January 1990 in Port Elizabeth, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played with the Eastern Province Kings. His regular position is scrum-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 17:33 Michael Bernardt (South African rugby union player) Michael Rudger Gerardus Bernardt (born 19 March 1993) is a South African professional rugby union player, who most recently played with the Eastern Province Kings. His regular position is centre, but he can also play as a fly-half or winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-22 17:39 Leo Kruger (rugby union) (Rugby player) Leo-Roubert Kruger (born (1997-07-11)11 July 1997) is a South African rugby union player for the Golden Lions in the Currie Cup and the Golden Lions XV in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 01:51 Johan Jackson (Rugby player) Johan Jackson (born 24 January 1987) is a South African rugby union footballer. He plays either as an outside-centre or a winger. He represents the Pumas in the Currie Cup and Vodacom Cup, having previously played for the Blue Bulls, Valke and Golden Lions. Poorly sourced rugby BLP with no evidence of notability. Fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT due to lack of independent coverage available online. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 02:10 Minenhle Mthethwa (Rugby player) Minenhle Lethuxolo Mthethwa (born 5 August 1991) is a South African professional rugby union player who most recently played with the Eastern Province Kings. He usually plays as a winger, but can also play as an outside centre. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 02:12 Lance Louw (rugby union) (Rugby player) Lance Louw (born (1990-06-28)28 June 1990) is a South African rugby union player. His regular position is wing. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 02:14 Lindokuhle Welemu (Rugby player) Lindokuhle Welemu (born (1991-04-29)29 April 1991 in South Africa) is a South African rugby union player for the Griffons (rugby union) in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is lock. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 06:33 Wesley Cloete (South African rugby union player) Wesley Wyndham Cloete (born 8 February 1990) is a South African rugby union player. His regular position is prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 06:39 Dale Sabbagh (South African rugby union player) Dale Gavin Sabbagh (born 2 February 1991) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with Border Super League side Old Selbornians. His regular position is fly-half or full-back. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 19:10 Clyde Davids (South African rugby union player) Clyde Eathan Davids (born 17 April 1993) is a South African professional rugby union player who last played for the Blue Bulls in the Currie Cup. His regular position is number eight or flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 19:15 Helmut Lehmann (rugby union) (Rugby player) Helmut Lehmann is a former South African rugby union player, that played for Western Province in the Currie Cup and Vodacom Cup. His usual position is flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 19:23 Logan Basson (South African rugby union player) Logan Andrew Basson (born 9 March 1989) is a South African professional rugby union player who last played for Western Province in the Rugby Challenge. He is a utility back that can play as a full-back, winger or fly-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-23 20:41 Christian Rust (Rugby player) Hendri Christian Rust (born 7 April 1992) is a South African rugby union player for El Salvador in the División de Honor in Spain. His regular position is fly-half, but he can also play outside centre or fullback. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 17:07 Eric Basson (South African rugby union player) Eric Basson (born 29 April 2002) is a South African rugby union player for the Blue Bulls in the Currie Cup. His regular position is flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 17:18 Hentzwill Pedro (Rugby player) Hentzwill Nowellen Pedro (born 21 July 1987 in George, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played with the SWD Eagles. His regular position is winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 17:21 Nkosi Nofuma (Rugby player) Nkosikhona Nofuma (born 29 April 1988) is a South African professional rugby union player for the Griffons in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. He can play as a flanker, number eight or lock. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 18:42 Deon Scholtz (Rugby player) Deon Scholtz (born 12 September 1985) is a South African rugby union footballer. He plays mostly as a winger. He most recently represented the Pumas in the Currie Cup and Vodacom Cup. He has previously played for the Boland Cavaliers and Leopards. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-24 18:44 Adrian Vermeulen (Rugby player) Adrian De Wet Vermeulen (born (1990-10-17)17 October 1990) is a former South African professional rugby union player who played first class rugby with the Leopards in 2015 and 2016. His regular position was at centre, and he occasionally played as a winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 01:21 Brummer Badenhorst (South African rugby union player) Brummer Badenhorst (born 6 September 1990) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing for UP Tuks. His usual position is prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 06:45 Wiseman Kamanga (Rugby player) Fhumulani Wiseman Kamanga (born 14 November 1991 in Johannesburg, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played provincial rugby with Griquas. His regular position is loosehead prop. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 06:48 Robert de Bruyn (Rugby player) Robert James de Bruyn (born 26 February 1991, in Johannesburg) is a South African rugby union player. His regular position is centre. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-25 21:18 Dylon Frylinck (Rugby player) Dylon Frylinck (born 15 January 1992) is a South African rugby union player, who most recently played for Griquas. He is a utility back, that mainly plays at scrum-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-26 01:27 Bobby Dyer (rugby union) (South African rugby union player) Robert James Dyer (born 4 December 1986 in Port Elizabeth) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with Eastern Province Grand Challenge club side Despatch. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-26 18:20 Brendan Hector (Rugby player) Brendan Roberto Eden Hector (born 3 February 1993 in Graaff-Reinet) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the Eastern Province Kings. His regular position is lock. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-27 23:14 Vince Gwavu (Rugby player) Lubabalo Vincent Gwavu (born 4 September 1987) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with club side QBR. His regular position is flanker. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 20:38 Quinton Crocker (South African rugby union player) Quinton Crocker (born 26 June 1987) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with KwaZulu-Natal club side College Rovers. He is a utility back that can play at centre, full-back, fly-half or winger. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 22:25 Sino Nyoka (Rugby player) Sinoyuvo 'Snake' Nyoka (born 7 August 1990) is a South African rugby union player who last played for the Border Bulldogs in the Currie Cup and in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is scrum-half. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 22:30 Riaan Vermeulen (South African rugby union player) Riaan Vermeulen (born 3 August 1984) is a South African rugby union player. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-29 00:08 Dean Grant (Rugby player) Dean Grant (born 18 March 1989 in Johannesburg, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the French Fédérale 1 side SO Chambéry. His regular position is fly-half. Sporting an uncanny resemblance to the Hollywood actor, Matt Damon, Dean is considered one of South Africa's sexiest sportsmen. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)

Geography/Regions/Americas/North America[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 23:37 Northern Europe cotton price The Northern Europe cotton price is an average of the five lowest prices of several internationally traded cottons (including cost, insurance, and freight) quoted for delivery in Northern Europe. The NE price is used by USDA in its formula for calculating the adjusted world price, used in administering marketing assistance loan and step 2 payment benefits under the cotton price support program. Per WP:NOTDATABASE. (B3251)
2024-05-23 03:16 WKUG-LP (Television station in Kentucky, United States (2002–2007)) WKUG-LP, UHF analog channel 62, was a low-power TBN-affiliated television station licensed to Glasgow, Kentucky, United States. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-23 13:54 Rutledge, Oregon (Unincorporated community in the state of Oregon, United States) Rutledge is an unincorporated community in Sherman County, in the U.S. state of Oregon. It lies east of Grass Valley and U.S. Route 97 along Rutledge Road. Non-notable location. This source, on page 484: [5] clearly states this was just a post office. From the satellite view: [6], it is plainly obvious this is not a community in any sense of the term. Fails WP:GEOLAND. (WeirdNAnnoyed)
2024-05-23 13:56 Monkland, Oregon (Unincorporated community in the state of Oregon, United States) Monkland is an unincorporated community in Sherman County, Oregon, United States, on Monkland Lane between Sherman Highway 97 and Wasco-Heppner Highway 206. There are only two farms and farm homes located at Monkland. Non-notable location; GNIS regurgitator and geographic names guide are not considered reliable or significant per recent deletion discussions. This source: [7], states Monkland was just a post office. Satellite view shows a farm in the middle of nowhere. Without further information this is a failure of WP:GEOLAND. (WeirdNAnnoyed)
2024-05-23 14:00 Rosebush, Oregon (Unincorporated community in Oregon, United States) Rosebush is a former community in Sherman County, Oregon, United States. It is contemporarily considered a ghost town. The only cited source is a county welcome page, and it's a literal bullet-point of one word. A comprehensive history of the area contains the word "Rosebush" once, and it's similarly trivial: [8]. Without further information this article is a clear failure of WP:GEOLAND. (WeirdNAnnoyed)
2024-05-23 14:06 Fargher, Oregon (Unincorporated community in Oregon, United States) Fargher is a former community in Sherman County, Oregon, United States. It was founded by Arthur W. Fargher, a native of the Isle of Man, who arrived in Oregon in 1878. The community's rail station was located near the Sherars Bridge. It is contemporarily considered a ghost town. No information found about this place other than the cited sources, one of which is a bullet-point mention. A history of the region shows that the Farghers were indeed a prominent settler family: [9], but no mention of a "community" or "town" of Fargher could be located. No appearance at all on any USGS topo map except a "Fargher Airfield" on the 2011 map: [10]. In all likelihood this was just a farm owned by the Fargher family. Without more information it's a failure of WP:GEOLAND and probably something conjured up by Sherman County so they could claim on their website they're home to several "ghost towns". (WeirdNAnnoyed)
2024-05-23 14:09 Early, Oregon (Unincorporated community in Oregon, United States) Early is a former community in Sherman County, Oregon, United States. It was located on the western bank of the John Day River about 5 miles up river to what is now La Page Park along Interstate 84. It was founded in 1902, with a post office established at this time. See my deletion rationale for Fargher, Oregon. This page uses the same two (trivial and unreliable) sources as that article and is similiarly uninformative. Satellite view just shows a stretch of river in a canyon, no human infrastructure. Obvious failure of WP:GEOLAND. (WeirdNAnnoyed)
2024-05-23 14:15 Gordon, Oregon (Unincorporated community in Oregon, United States) Gordon is a former community in Sherman County, Oregon, United States. It was first settled in 1875 by Tom Gordon, an Irish immigrant, and formally established with a post office in 1896, which only operated from July to December that year before closing. Same situation as Fargher, Oregon and Early, Oregon. Sources are both trivial mentions and unreliable; a history of the region mentions Gordon Ridge: [11] but never once mentions a community by that name. Satellite view shows empty farmland. Fails WP:GNG and WP:GEOLAND. (WeirdNAnnoyed)
2024-05-23 14:18 Gorman, Oregon (Unincorporated community in Oregon, United States) Gorman is a former community in Sherman County, Oregon, United States, established in 1892. Its post office opened August 25, 1892, and operated for eight years before closing in 1900. Gorman is contemporarily considered a ghost town. Same deletion rationale as Early, Oregon, Gordon, Oregon, and Fargher, Oregon. Same two unreliable sources, one of which just seems to be a listing of onetime rural post offices so they can say there are a lot of ghost towns in the area. No mention at all in a history of the area: [12], no other information found, and nothing visible by satellite. Complete failure of WP:GNG and WP:GEOLAND. (WeirdNAnnoyed)
2024-05-24 15:26 Isle of the Mohawks (island in the Mohawk River in Schenectady County, New York, United States) Isle of the Mohawks is an island on the Mohawk River south of Scotia in Schenectady County, New York. Fails WP:NATFEAT. "Named natural features are often notable, provided information beyond statistics and coordinates is known to exist. [...] If a Wikipedia article cannot be developed using known sources, information on the feature can instead be included in a more general article on local geography. For example, a river island with no information available except name and location should probably be described in an article on the river". The small island seems to be of little significance, with no hope of expanding it to an encyclopedic article. (Geschichte)
2024-05-24 21:11 Swofford, Washington (Unincorporated community in Washington, United States) Swofford is an unincorporated community in Lewis County, in the U.S. state of Washington. The town sits on the south shore of Riffe Lake. Meany's (source 3)[13] definition of places is less stringent than Wikipedia's definition, which is legally recognized places. Meany wrote that Swofford (the man) set up a post office in the Swofford valley and later moved it to Mossy Rock. Places don't move, but post offices do (sometimes in shoe boxes). Washington State place names published in 1971 [14] Doesn't list swofford as a place. A rather unreliable source [15], but commonly referenced nonetheless lists this place, but all of the reliable sources used for their mention call it "Swofford Valley".

Reading newspapers from the area reveals that the post office served the Swofford valley, and the people who lived in the valley used it's name to define where they lived. The Centralia Daily Chronicle in 1976 (July 1, 1976 Page 31[16]) explains that the valley had a rural farming community with a post office and a drug store. The reality is that these were probably not separate buildings, and it would not be all that unusual for this to actually be Swofford's residence as well. It is not a legally recognized place. Furthermore, it's full name is "Swofford Valley". The confusion arises because post offices in the 1800's could only have one word names. If it can be established this Valley is notable, I'm okay with moving it to Swofford Valley, Washington, or similar. (James.folsom)

2024-05-24 23:00 731 Signal Squadron 731 Signal Squadron is a Canadian Army communication unit headquartered at Canadian Forces Base Shilo, near Brandon, Manitoba. The unit is responsible to provide communication information systems, strategic infrastructure services and support to Army Regular Force and Reserve Force units in Saskatchewan, Manitoba and northwestern Ontario. Fails WP:GNG. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-24 23:48 Hanson Ferry, Washington (Ghost town in Washington (state)) Hanson Ferry was a town in Asotin County, Washington. The GNIS classifies it as a populated place. This was never anything but the site of a post office. [17] Refer to the top of page 698. (James.folsom)
2024-05-25 00:30 Jerry, Washington (Unincorporated community in Washington, United States) Jerry is an unincorporated community in Asotin County, in the U.S. state of Washington. "JERRY, a town in the northeastern part of Asotin County, named

by John Knight, on August 1, 1906, in honor -of Jerry McGuire, a stock rancher who owned land there since 1875.

The Meany source (3,5) has looser standards for the definition of towns than Wikipedia does. This place is not listed in the 1971 book Washington State Place Names [18]. Or, An illustrated history of southeastern Washington, including Walla Walla, Columbia, Garfield and Asotin counties, Washington, 1906. [19]. Washington: A Guide to the Evergreen State Says Jerry is a cluster of nondescript buildings. [20] pg357. The description goes to describe what I assume is just Jerry's Ranch. (James.folsom)
2024-05-24 21:51 Brian Benison Brian Benison is an American musical artist. He is the leader of 5Choir, a Christian music group based in Fort Worth, Texas, United States. [BLP]
2024-05-25 14:19 Illinois State University College of Arts and Sciences (school of arts and sciences at Illinois State University) The Illinois State University College of Arts and Sciences is a college of Illinois State University, a public research university in Normal, Illinois. The college is divided into three groups: science and mathematics, social studies, and humanities. No evidence of notability is provided or appears to be readily available and notability cannot be inherited from the subject's unquestionably notable parent organization (ElKevbo)
2024-05-22 09:38 Mud Island Shoal (Bucks County, Pennsylvania, U.S) Mud Island Shoal is a small island in the Delaware River in Bensalem Township in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, just before the confluence with Rancocas Creek. Fails WP:NATFEAT. "Named natural features are often notable, provided information beyond statistics and coordinates is known to exist. [...] If a Wikipedia article cannot be developed using known sources, information on the feature can instead be included in a more general article on local geography. For example, a river island with no information available except name and location should probably be described in an article on the river". The small island seems to be of little significance, with no hope of expanding it to an encyclopedic article. (Geschichte)
2024-05-25 06:43 Bocephus King (Canadian musician) Bocephus King is a Canadian indie musician from Vancouver. His discography includes Joco Music released in 1996 by Tonic Records, A Small Good Thing released in 1998 by New West Records, The Blue Sickness released in 2000 by Tonic Records, All Children Believe In Heaven released in 2004 by Tonic Records and Willie Dixon God Damn released in 2011 by Tonic Records. nothing to demonstrate notability. only includes a self-written bio as a source (FMSky)
2024-05-26 02:16 Daphne Deloren (American meteorologist) Daphne Deloren is a meteorologist, working for places like CNN, NBC6, WNEM-TV5, WCTV, and KESQ. She began working for WSMV's 4WARN Weather team in June 2016. No indication of significant coverage for notability. (Sammi Brie)
2024-05-26 04:07 James Blair Down (Canadian citizen) James Blair Down is a Canadian citizen who operated a large telemarketing scam with others. On November 7, 1999, the CBS highly rated television show 60 Minutes aired an interview with Martin S. Kenney that was conducted by Mike Wallace as part of a program segment called Con Man that focused on Kenney's firm Interclaim, which worked in conjunction with the FBI to attempt to recover millions of dollars of investor funds stolen in the telemarking fraud by Blair Down. Some reliable sources but not enough for a full article. The fact that article is in obviously bad, unencyclopedic state, and has only been edited a handful of times in the last two decades, shows this person does not have much notability. (QueensanditsCrazy)
2024-05-26 05:41 WTZT-CD (Television station in Alabama, United States) WTZT-CD, virtual and VHF digital channel 11, branded on-air as ZTV11, is a low-powered, Class A Cozi TV-affiliated television station licensed to Athens, Alabama, United States. Founded on November 2, 1988, the station is owned by Jamie Cooper and wife Gloria, both of whom also host a morning show on the station. Subject does not meet the GNG. (Mvcg66b3r)
2024-05-26 09:41 KESU-LP (Radio station in Lihue, Hawaii) KESU-LP (94.9 FM, "K-Iesu Radio 94.9M") is a radio station licensed to serve the community of Lihue, Hawaii. The station is owned by Calvary Chapel Lihue. It airs a Christian radio format. No secondary sources to demonstrate notability. Fails WP:GNG. (AusLondonder)
2024-05-27 21:58 Tunnicliff Hill (Mountain in New York, United States) Tunnicliff Hill is a mountain located in Central New York region of New York by Snowdon, New York. Fails WP:NATFEAT. "Named natural features are often notable, provided information beyond statistics and coordinates is known to exist. [...] If a Wikipedia article cannot be developed using known sources, information on the feature can instead be included in a more general article on local geography. For example, a river island with no information available except name and location should probably be described in an article on the river". The small hill seems to be of little significance, with no hope of expanding it to an encyclopedic article. (Geschichte)
2024-05-28 11:33 The Lookoff, Nova Scotia (human settlement in Nova Scotia, Canada) The Lookoff is a community in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, located in Kings County. Lack of notability and any information anything past the most basic description with an uncited source. (Nxnbl)
2024-05-28 01:08 Varick (hamlet), New York (Hamlet in New York, United States) Varick is a hamlet in the Town of Varick, Seneca County, New York, United States near the former Seneca Army Depot along Reeder Creek. It is located nine miles (14 km) southeast of the City of Geneva, at an elevation of 604 feet (184 m). The primary intersection in the hamlet is at N.Y. Route 96A and Yale Farm Road (CR 127). this hamlet does not exist (Phytism)
2024-05-28 07:38 Jared Ravizza (American conspiracy theorist) Jared Ravizza, of Martha’s Vineyard, is an American conspiracy theorist and self-described model suspected of committing multiple stabbing incidents in the Boston area in May 2024. These include the stabbing of four underage girls at a movie theater in Braintree, Massachusetts and of two McDonald’s employees in Plymouth; Ravizza has been formally charged in court with the latter. WP:SUSPECT. (Fram)
2024-05-28 22:25 Richard N. Holzapfel (American historian) Richard Charles Neitzel Holzapfel (born 1954) is a former professor of Church History and Doctrine at Brigham Young University (BYU) and an author on topics related to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), Western and Utah History, and the New Testament. person is not popular enough to have a wiki page (OxfordWolfson)

Geography/Regions/Americas/South America[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-23 14:05 List of ESPN Latin America announcers The commentators teams of selected major sports and SportsCenter anchors of the Latin American networks of ESPN International, such as ESPN, ESPN 2, ESPN 3, ESPN+, ESPN Brasil and ESPN Caribbean. WP:LISTN not met; completely unsourced. (Let'srun)
2024-05-23 15:52 Ricaurte (TransMilenio) (Transmilenio stop) The transfer station Ricaurte is part of the TransMilenio mass-transit system of Bogotá, Colombia, opened in the year 2000. Subject is not notable, and no reliable sources could be found. (Sage or something)
2024-05-28 20:36 Morochuco (Cowboys of the Peruvian Andes) The Morochucos are the cowboys of the plains of the Peruvian Andes, living mainly in the Region of Ayacucho. They raise cattle and tame horses for their livelihood, and they engage in other typical activities of a cattle-horseman cowboy. They are comparable to other cowboys of Latin America such as the qorilazo, the cowboys from Cusco, also in Peru, the Chilean huaso, the Argentine/Bolivian/Uruguayan gaucho, the Spanish vaquero, the Colombian/Venezuelan llanero, and the Mexican charro. No secondary sources found. Looks like WP:OR to me. (Cocobb8)

Geography/Regions/Asia[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-25 09:46 Mong Kok (disambiguation) (Topics referred to by the same term) Mong Kok is an area of Hong Kong with the highest population density in the world. "Mong Kok" is not ambiguous, and the two articles on stations have hatnotes pointing to each other. Also delete incoming redirects (Shhhnotsoloud)
2024-05-23 20:58 Khusugtun (Mongolian Musical Ensemble) Khusugtun is a musical ensemble from Mongolia that plays music inspired by traditional Mongolian music. The group has released 2 albums and notably performed at the 2011 BBC Proms. In 2015, the group came in second place in the first season of Asia's Got Talent. Insufficient sourcing for WP:MUSIC or WP:GNG; mentioned in BBC documentary and brief mention as contentants on reality show (Ohnoitsjamie)

Geography/Regions/Asia/East Asia[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-24 07:29 Liu Kang (footballer) (Chinese footballer and coach) Liu Kang (16 February 1961 – 29 March 2013, aged 52) was a Chinese football player and coach. Fails GNG (Boneless Pizza!)
2024-05-25 18:29 Kyoto College of Medical Technology (higher education institution in Kyoto Prefecture, Japan) is a private junior college in Nantan, Kyoto, Japan, established in 1989. I can't find any reliable sources with In-depth coverage of the subject to meet WP:GNG, the article currently does not cite any source and fails WP:GNG and WP:NSCHOOL. (Grabup)
2024-05-26 12:20 Hua Qing minigun (Chinese Gatling-type machine gun) The Hua Qing minigun is a Chinese Gatling-type machine gun. The weapon is chambered in the 7.62×54mmR round, and was introduced at the 2009 Anti Terrorist Trade Show at Beijing. Mix-up (gun actually made by Jianshe 建设), not notable (no other sources with SIGCOV found) (MSG17)

Geography/Regions/Asia/South Asia[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 22:25 Jiti Jitayi Politics Jiti Jitayi Politics is a political party founded by transgender/Hijra (South Asia) people in Madhya Pradesh, India, on 17 October 2003. The party president at that time was Suraiya. Title is likely incorrect based on additional sources 1 2. Regardless, the party lacks significant enough coverage to be adequately established as a notable enough party, nor is there any indication that this party is still active. (B3251)
2024-05-24 16:04 Ashok Kumar (field hockey, born 1966) (Indian field hockey player) Ashok Kumar (born 8 April 1966) is an Indian field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1988 Summer Olympics. Violates WP:SPORTSCRIT#4. No evidence of notability. Not mentioned at Field hockey at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament so that's not a suitable redirect target. (Pppery)
2024-05-24 16:10 Micro Tech Global Foundation (organization) Micro Tech Global Foundation (MTGF) is an Indian non-profit and non-governmental organization which focuses on promoting the fields of education, research, sports, art and culture. Set up by security devices manufacturer Micro Technologies (India) Limited in 2010 as a corporate social endeavour, MTGF strives to amalgamate technology with both sports and cultural activities, and also offered support to innovators. Defunct charitable foundation of a non-notable company, there are sources but they seem like press releases as a part of a long-concluded marketing push which may well have included this article itself. Unclear that the sourcing is the sustained, independent coverage needed for an objective encyclopedic article. The lack of any non-bot/housekeeping edits or inbound links in a decade also supports that possibility. (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-24 23:39 A-One Punjabi TV (Television channel) A-One Punjabi TV is the first HD Punjabi TV channel in India. Owned by Aone Network and headquartered in Noida, India, Chakde TV is classified as Category and exempt third-language services. A-One Punjabi TV produces 80% of its content locally. Fails WP:GNG. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-25 13:59 Aetbaar (disambiguation) (Topics referred to by the same term) Aetbaar or Aitbaar (lit.'trust') may refer to: Disambiguation page not required (WP:ONEOTHER). Primary topic article has a hatnote to the only other use. (Shhhnotsoloud)
2024-05-25 17:07 Rasikendra Nath Nandi (A Vaishnav scholar, social reformer and a zamindar from erstwhile Pabna district, now in Bangladesh. He wrote several manuscripts explaining the Vaishnavism in simple Sanskrit.) Rasikendra Nath Nandi (Bengali: রসিকেন্দ্র নাথ নন্দী) (also known as Rasik Nandi) was a Vaishnav scholar, social reformer and zamindar. He was born in 1882 in the village of Bhat-bera in district Pabna of undivided Bengal (now in Sirajganj District, Bangladesh). Zero secondary sources found. Entire article is original research, purportedly based on an oral history interview which is not properly referenced. Does not meet WP:GNG. (Cielquiparle)
2024-05-25 19:58 Shri Datta Venkata Sai Temple The Shri Datta Venkata Sai Temple in Kalloor, India is a replica of the Shirdi Sai Baba temple built by Prabhakar Maharaj. No indication of its existence. Likely not notable otherwise. (OzzyOlly)
2024-05-26 02:06 Dilkash Pakistan (Television program in Pakistan) Dilkash Pakistan is a travel guide television program on Pakistan. It was an informative programme and showed the culture and traditions of different areas in Pakistan. The program was hosted by Ayesha Khalid and telecast on CNBC Pakistan, which is now known as GNN. Fails the WP:GNG. (Sammi Brie)
2024-05-26 01:20 Thangthong Dewachen Nunnery Thangthong Dewachen Nunnery is a Buddhist nunnery in Bhutan. No independent sources. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-24 05:17 St. Xavier's College, Mapusa, Goa St. Xavier's College is a private Catholic university college located in the town of Mapusa (also spelt as Mapuca, Mapusa or Mapsa) in the district of North Goa, India. It is the largest and oldest college north of the Mandovi River in Goa, a state along the west coast of India. Not notable per NSCHOOL or GNG; no RS found during BEFORE search. (StartGrammarTime)
2024-05-26 03:39 Prasoon Pandey (Indian film director) Prasoon Pandey is an Indian film director of advertising films. No sources besides IMDb. No claim of notability. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-28 04:50 Nenasala (organization) Nenasala (Wisdom Outlet) is a telecentre project by the Government of Sri Lanka. Developed under the e-Sri Lanka Initiative, which is implemented by the ICT Agency of Sri Lanka. Communication centers are being built by the government in rural areas to help fight poverty, develop culture and commerce, and sustain peace. Fails WP:NORG - is principally dependent upon a single primary source. (Dan arndt)
2024-05-28 04:51 Revatha College, Balapitiya (Government public school in Balapitiya, Sri Lanka) Revatha College (also referred to as Revatha National School) is a primary and secondary school in Balapitiya, Sri Lanka. Fails WP:NSCHOOL, lacks any sources or references. (Dan arndt)
2024-05-27 13:18 Century Alert for Heat Wave Century Alert was introduced by the Uttar Pradesh State Disaster Management Authority (UPSDMA) Government of Uttar Pradesh in the report entitled "District Wise Heat Threshold Determination for Uttar Pradesh and India-2024". The report addresses the escalating challenge of increasing heat wave frequency and intensity while defining Heat Threshold for each districts. WP:NOTNP (Claggy)

Geography/Regions/Asia/Southeast Asia[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-24 05:16 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2011 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2011 was the Forty-Third Mutya ng Pilipinas pageant, held at The Arena in San Juan, Metro Manila, Philippines, on December 2, 2011. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:26 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2012 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2012 was the Forty-Fourth Mutya ng Pilipinas pageant, held at the UP Theater in Diliman, Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines, on August 12, 2012. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:27 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2010 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2010, the 42nd edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on Aug. 28th, 2010 at Resorts World Manila Grand Theater in Newport City, Pasay, Metro Manila. Carla Jenina Lizardo, the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas Intercontinental 2010, Barbara Salvador, Mutya ng Pilipinas Tourism International 2010 and Christi McGarry named as Mutya ng Pilipinas Asia Pacific 2010. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing but one is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:29 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2009 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2009, the 41st edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on Aug. 9th, 2009 in Baler, Aurora. Jane Bañares, the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas International 2009 and Jacqueline Schubert named as Mutya ng Pilipinas Tourism (Aurora) 2009. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing but one is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:31 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2002 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2002, the 34th edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on June 8, 2002 with Miriam Chui proclaimed as the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas Asia Pacific who bested 23 other candidates. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and the single source is still from a non reliable pageant blog, adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:32 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2003 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2003 was the 35th Mutya ng Pilipinas pageant, held on May 31, 2003. Jamie Liz Castillo proclaimed as the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas Asia Pacific who bested 23 other candidates. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and the single source is still from a non reliable pageant blog, adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 05:39 Mutya ng Pilipinas 2008 (Beauty pageant) Mutya ng Pilipinas 2008, the 40th edition of Mutya ng Pilipinas, Inc., was held on Dec. 7th, 2008 in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan. Jonavi Raisa Quiray, the winner of Mutya ng Pilipinas International 2008 and Jam Charish Libatog named as Mutya ng Pilipinas Tourism Puerto Princesa 2008. Created by a promotion sockfarm ten years ago, and all sourcing but one is still from two non reliable pageant blogs, pageantopolis.com and adventuresofabeautyqueen.com. Presumed to be a non notable event. (Bri)
2024-05-24 12:48 Ari Kurniawan (Indonesian footballer) Ari Kurniawan Sarwoto (born April 11, 1978) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a goalkeeper. This biography article has one failed verification reference, insufficient to establish notability. After searching, found social media for other same name people, but no comprehensive, in-depth coverage of this specific person. Article was created on 26 July 2012. (JoeNMLC)
2024-05-28 08:43 2018 Liga 1 U-16 (Football tournament season) The 2018 Liga 1 U-16 (known as the Super Soccer TV Elite Pro Academy Liga 1 U-16 2018 for sponsorship reasons) was the first season of the Liga 1 Elite Pro Academy U-16. The league is currently the youth level (U-16) football league in Indonesia. The season started on 15 September 2018 and finished on 9 December 2018. Per Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/2022 Liga 1 U-16. (Geschichte)
2024-05-28 08:43 2019 Liga 1 U-16 (Football tournament season) The 2019 Liga 1 U-16 (known as the Super Soccer TV Elite Pro Academy Liga 1 U-16 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was the second season of the Liga 1 Elite Pro Academy U-16. The league is currently the youth level (U-16) football league in Indonesia. The season started on 19 April and finished with a final on 6 October 2019. Per Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/2022 Liga 1 U-16. (Geschichte)
2024-05-28 17:05 Miss Universe Cambodia 2023 (Beauty pageant) Miss Universe Cambodia 2023 was the 5th edition of the Miss Universe Cambodia pageant which was held on September 7, 2023, in Phnom Penh. Sotheary By Miss Universe Cambodia 2017 crowned Sotima John as her successor at the end of the event. Notability of this event has not been established as per WP:GNG. One or two non-primary sources are not sufficient. (Bri)

Geography/Regions/Asia/West Asia[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-25 16:14 Bashira (Iraqi newspaper) Bashira (Arabic: بشارة 'Good News') was a popular Arabic-language newspaper published in Fallujah, Iraq. It was discontinued during the summer of 2006. The newspaper was replaced by a new newspaper called Al Anbaa. No secondary sources found. Does not meet WP:GNG. (Cielquiparle)
2024-05-22 19:01 Repairing Rainbows (Canadian memoir of Lynda Fishman) Repairing Rainbows is a 2010 memoir by Lynda Fishman. The book is a true story of family, tragedy and choices. Article on a seemingly non-notable self-published book, created by an WP:SPA. Nearly all of the sources, including all of those being used as "reviews" are primary, being from the official website. Searches did not turn up any reviews or coverage of the book in reliable sources, making it a failure of the WP:GNG and WP:NBOOK. (Rorshacma)
2024-05-28 16:22 Tahani Al-Yanbaawi (Saudi footballer (born 1995)) Tahani Kamal Al-Yonbaawi (Arabic: تهاني كمال الينبعاوي; born 1 October 1995) is a Saudi footballer who plays as a Defender for Saudi Women's Premier League's team Al Nassr. WP:TOOSOON for an article. No evidence of notability. All I found was this transactional announcement. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-28 23:00 2024 Oxford Action for Palestine Encampment The Oxford Action for Palestine Encampment (OA4P) is an ongoing protest encampment, created and led by Oxford Action for Palestine (OAP). Starting as a single encampment on the front lawn of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, a second encampment was created and related protest actions and occupations sprang up across Oxford. Created by WP:PIA-prohibited non-ECP user. Unclear notability outside of 2024 pro-Palestinian protests on university campuses. (Morbidthoughts)
2024-05-29 00:17 Vakhtang Akhobadze (Rugby player) Vakhtangi Akhobadze (born 7 May 1993) is a professional rugby union player from Georgia. His position is Prop and he currently plays for Agen in the Top 14. Rugby BLP that fails WP:GNG and WP:SPORTCRIT. I am unable to find anything approaching WP:SIGCOV. (JTtheOG)

Geography/Regions/Europe[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-24 13:44 Aetoloacarnania Football Clubs Association (Greek football team) The Aetoloacarnania Football Clubs Association (AFCA) (Ένωση Ποδοσφαιρικών Σωματείων Αιτωλοακαρνανίας, ΕΠΣΑΙΤΩΛ = Enosi Podosfairikon Somateion Aetoloacarnanias, EPSAITOL) is a football (soccer) organization in the Aetolia-Acarnania region that is part of the Greek Football Federation. Non-notable amateur football club. Unreferenced since its creation in 2015. (Hey man im josh)
2024-05-24 23:28 2018 European Busdriver Championship The 2018 European Busdriver Championship was the inaugural competition of a bus maneuvering challenge. It was organized by Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe and held on September 22, 2018, at their bus depot at Indira-Gandhi-Straße, Berlin, Germany. 21 teams, each composed of one male and one female participant, competed in an eight-discipline course with three bus types. Fails WP:NEVENT. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-25 17:43 List of WRC2 drivers This is a list of drivers to have competed in the WRC2 Championship and Super 2000 World Rally Championship). Unsourced, abandoned for 9 years and unlikely to be improved, confusing amalgamation of WRC2 and SWRC, pointless list even if improved serves no meaningful purpose, achieves next to no visitors (Rally Wonk)
2024-05-26 00:34 Peterborough City Centre (City Centre) Peterborough City Centre is the city centre district of Peterborough, England. It serves as a cultural, social and political centre in the East of England. In recent decades, the city centre has rapidly swelled in size and continues to endorse this. Zero sources to establish that this is a notable enough topic to exist outside of Peterborough (Ohnoitsjamie)
2024-05-27 22:16 SDG Group (management consulting firm) SDG group is a management consulting firm specialized in business performance management and analytical applications design and development. No evidence of notability. Refs are either company documents or COI (76.14.122.5)
2024-05-28 16:41 Greece–Bulgaria European Territorial Cooperation Programme The Greece–Bulgaria Territorial Co-operation Programme is a European cooperation Programme according to the European Cohesion Policy 2007–2013. Fails GNG. Nothing in Google news, newspapers or books. (LibStar)

Geography/Regions/Europe/Eastern Europe[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 20:56 Victoria Surdila Greci (Romanian oină team) SiretuI Bacǎu[clarification needed] is a Romanian oină team in the National Senior Championship. An unsourced, confusing one-line stub for seventeen years, it's not even clear what the actual article subject even is. (Just Step Sideways)
2024-05-26 16:19 Polish Squash Federation Polish Squash Federation ("Polska Federacja Squasha" in Polish) is the National Organisation for Squash in Poland. Unsourced for over a decade, I don't doubt the organization exists, but it seems there isn't much to say about it and it isn't particularly notable. (Just Step Sideways)

Geography/Regions/Europe/Northern Europe[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 02:35 Purrkur Pillnikk (Icelandic rock band) Purrkur Pillnikk ('Sleepy Chess-Player') was a rock band from late punk era in Iceland. The band existed for 18 months (1981–1982) and were very active as they released at least two LPs, one live-album and two EPs. The distinguishable character of the band were Einar Örn's howling and off-key singing and his lyrics that most often described very day-to-day things but with a lot of interwoven angst. Lack of notability (Revirvlkodlaku)
2024-05-22 14:55 Welsh Ladies Indoor Bowling Association The Welsh Ladies Indoor Bowling Association (WLIBA) (formed 1950) is the governing body for the indoor bowling clubs in Wales. It has 25 affiliated clubs. The WLIBA organise national competitions and select and manage the national side. Lacking secondary sources. Fails WP:ORGCRIT. (AusLondonder)
2024-05-23 13:35 Mike Gaston (British radio DJ) Mike Gaston (created 1949) is a broadcast journalist, peace builder and singer/songwriter living in Northern Ireland. Essentially someone's resume blown up to encyclopedia article. The sources are all very passing mentions if they mention him at all (the more in-depth ones don't). The ones that do are just WP:ROUTINE schedules and whatnot. I don't see the sort of significant coverage needed for WP:GNG (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-23 20:35 Leadership & Management Wales Leadership & Management Wales was an organisation funded by the Welsh Government and the European Social Fund to encourage the development of leadership and management skills among businesses in Wales. It was active between 2009 and 2014. This possibly defunct organisation article has insufficient references to establish notability. After searching, found same name or topic educational programs, but no comprehensive, in-depth coverage of this specific organisation. Article was created by a new user on 30 April 2012 (their only contribution to Wikipedia). (JoeNMLC)
2024-05-24 16:22 London Youth Support Trust (organization) Launch It is the new name for The London Youth Support Trust, which was rebranded in 2019. Building on their 19 years’ experience of supporting young people from disadvantaged backgrounds to start successful and sustainable businesses, they have expanded their services across the UK. Every source is a press release or directory listing. Does not seem to have the kind of sustained, independent coverage by reliable sources needed to meet WP:ORG / WP:GNG (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-28 16:06 IAYSG (Organisation for the promotion of the sciences among youth in Ireland) Irish Association of Youth Science Groups (IAYSG) was an association of disparate science groups in Ireland in the 1980s. The IAYSG, which was founded in 1982, met in Thomas Prior House in the Royal Dublin Society (RDS) in Ballsbridge, Dublin, Ireland.[citation needed] Non-notable org. Fails WP:GNG and WP:NORG. A search for "Irish Association of Youth Science Groups" (zero results when Wikipedia and its mirrors excluded) and "Youth Science Ireland" (13 results) return insufficient sources to establish or support even the basic facts of org's existence. Not to mind a claim to notability. Only source is an entry in a directory. Zero results in Irish news outlets (Irish Times, Irish Independent, Irish Examiner, RTÉ, etc). (Guliolopez)
2024-05-28 22:42 Luke Akehurst (British Politican, PR consultant, and member of the Labour Party NEC) Luke Akehurst (born 2 March 1972) is a British Labour party official, and former counciller. Since 2022, he has been a member of the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party, having also previously been on the NEC from 2010 untill 2012. Non-notable (TheTechie)

Geography/Regions/Europe/Southern Europe[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-24 13:38 Megas Alexandros Irakleia F.C. (Football club) Megas Alexandros Football Club is a Greek football club, based in Irakleia, Serres. Non-notable low tier football club which has been unreferenced since its creation in 2010 and tagged as such since 2012. (Hey man im josh)
2024-05-24 13:45 Evros Football Clubs Association (governing body of association football in the Greek prefecture of Evros) Evros Football Clubs Association or EPS Evros (Greek: Ένωση Ποδοσφαιρικών Σωματείων Έβρου, ΕΠΣ Έβρου) is a union representing the football teams from the Greek regional unit of Evros. Its headquarters are in Alexandroupoli. Non-notable local amateur football club which has been unreferenced since its creation in 2008. (Hey man im josh)
2024-05-24 13:47 Aetos Skydra F.C. (Football club) Aetos F.C. (Greek: Α.Σ. Αετός Σκύδρας) was a Greek football club, based in Skydra, Greece. Non-notable amateur football club which has been unreferenced since its creation in 2010. (Hey man im josh)
2024-05-25 13:01 Education in Coimbra Since early ages, Coimbra developed into an important cultural centre, firstly due to the school founded in 1131 in the Santa Cruz Monastery, essential on medieval times and a meeting point for the intellectual and power elites, where famous medieval figures studied, like Saint Anthony of Lisbon. Unsourced, issues around original research and not a notable topic. (Boleyn)
2024-05-27 02:08 Maltese National Amateur League 2 (Football league) The Maltese National Amateur League 2 (referred to as the IZIBet Amateur League 2 for sponsorship reasons is the fourth-highest division in Maltese football, introduced after four years only with three levels of the Maltese football pyramid. Fails WP:GNG, lacks any sources or references. (Dan arndt)
2024-05-28 19:30 Qëndrim Ismajli (Kosovar professional footballer (born 1999)) Qëndrim Ismajli (born 23 May 1999) is a Kosovar professional footballer who plays as a Left-back for Football Superleague of Kosovo club Gjilani Seems like a case of WP:TOOSOON as I am struggling to find WP:SIGCOV on this Football Superleague of Kosovo player. (JTtheOG)

Geography/Regions/Europe/Western Europe[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-27 20:57 Carole Bienaimé (French film producer) Carole Bienaimé (also Carole Bienaimé-Besse), is a commissioner and board member of Conseil Supérieur de l'Audiovisuel, an independent agency of French government that regulates communications by radio, television, and internet platforms across France and all its territories. I don't think the notability criteria has been met. The article was created by an apparent COI editor. (Risedemise)

Geography/Regions/Oceania[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-26 23:29 Teague McElroy (New Zealand rugby union player) Teague McElroy (born 4 March 1997 in New Zealand) is a New Zealand rugby union player who plays for North Harbour in the National Provincial Championship. His playing position is prop. I am unable to find enough coverage of the subject, a New Zealand rugby union player, to meet WP:GNG or WP:SPORTCRIT. (JTtheOG)
2024-05-27 14:23 James Earl (grazier) (Merchant, cartage and cattle breeder) James Earl (1874-1907) was a merchant in Far North Queensland of cartage and started cattle breeding. Fails WP:GNG, lacks any substantial coverage in mutiple sources or references. Unable to draftify as draft already exists. Mainly original research. (Dan arndt)

History and Society/Business and economics[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 19:36 Datacoup (New York based start up company) Datacoup was a New York-based start up company that provides a marketplace for individuals to sell a feed of their personal data, such as social media activity and credit card transactions, to information brokers for a monthly fee. In November 2019, Datacoup issued an email to users stating that it was shutting down operations and will be decommissioning all of its servers. Doesn't seem to meet WP:CORP, all coverage was just of the launch of the company, no sustained media interest. Its closure apparently wasn't even reported on. (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-22 02:01 Beach Ultimate Lovers Association (organization) The Beach Ultimate Lovers Association (BULA) is the worldwide organization that helps organizers and players further develop the sport of Beach Ultimate. The World Flying Disc Federation (WFDF) has approved BULA as the organizing body to promote tournaments, leagues and recreational play. No significant coverage. (SL93)
2024-05-24 16:22 London Youth Support Trust (organization) Launch It is the new name for The London Youth Support Trust, which was rebranded in 2019. Building on their 19 years’ experience of supporting young people from disadvantaged backgrounds to start successful and sustainable businesses, they have expanded their services across the UK. Every source is a press release or directory listing. Does not seem to have the kind of sustained, independent coverage by reliable sources needed to meet WP:ORG / WP:GNG (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-26 20:20 Saint Blues Guitar Workshop (Memphis-based guitar manufacturer) Saint Blues Guitar Workshop is a Memphis, Tennessee manufacturer of boutique electric guitars. The company was born out of the custom guitar division of Strings & Things Music store in Memphis, but originally only lasted for a five-year run in the 1980s. Fails WP:GNG. Article is basically an ad for the company. Sources are a company brochure and a press release. Google turns up another press release and nothing else. No significant coverage that I could find to establish notability. (Mbinebri)
2024-05-27 03:50 Velocify (company) Velocify, Inc. is a cloud computing company, headquartered in El Segundo, California, that provides cloud-based intelligent sales automation software designed for fast-paced sales environments. Fails the notability guideline for companies. Sources are either trivial (routine announcements of funding, name changes, product releases, acquisitions, or winning insignificant awards), non-independent, or unreliable (Forbes contributors). Checked for decent sources under both "Velocify" and "Leads360" and could not find any. (Teratix)
2024-05-27 22:16 SDG Group (management consulting firm) SDG group is a management consulting firm specialized in business performance management and analytical applications design and development. No evidence of notability. Refs are either company documents or COI (76.14.122.5)
2024-05-28 17:43 Vester Guitars (trademark) Vester was a musical instrument brand specialised in guitars and amplifiers, formed as a part of retail company "Samuel Music" based in Effingham, Illinois. Fails WP:GNG. The two available sources are on Vester's non-notable parent company, not Vester itself. Google News returns one mention of the brand in a guitarist interview with a non-RS source and a search of Guitar World's site returns one hit that lists the brand in a recap of a Youtube video - there aren't even the usual PR releases! I don't see this being a notable company. (Mbinebri)
2024-05-28 22:25 Richard N. Holzapfel (American historian) Richard Charles Neitzel Holzapfel (born 1954) is a former professor of Church History and Doctrine at Brigham Young University (BYU) and an author on topics related to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), Western and Utah History, and the New Testament. person is not popular enough to have a wiki page (OxfordWolfson)

History and Society/Education[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-23 20:35 Leadership & Management Wales Leadership & Management Wales was an organisation funded by the Welsh Government and the European Social Fund to encourage the development of leadership and management skills among businesses in Wales. It was active between 2009 and 2014. This possibly defunct organisation article has insufficient references to establish notability. After searching, found same name or topic educational programs, but no comprehensive, in-depth coverage of this specific organisation. Article was created by a new user on 30 April 2012 (their only contribution to Wikipedia). (JoeNMLC)
2024-05-24 16:22 London Youth Support Trust (organization) Launch It is the new name for The London Youth Support Trust, which was rebranded in 2019. Building on their 19 years’ experience of supporting young people from disadvantaged backgrounds to start successful and sustainable businesses, they have expanded their services across the UK. Every source is a press release or directory listing. Does not seem to have the kind of sustained, independent coverage by reliable sources needed to meet WP:ORG / WP:GNG (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-25 13:01 Education in Coimbra Since early ages, Coimbra developed into an important cultural centre, firstly due to the school founded in 1131 in the Santa Cruz Monastery, essential on medieval times and a meeting point for the intellectual and power elites, where famous medieval figures studied, like Saint Anthony of Lisbon. Unsourced, issues around original research and not a notable topic. (Boleyn)
2024-05-25 14:19 Illinois State University College of Arts and Sciences (school of arts and sciences at Illinois State University) The Illinois State University College of Arts and Sciences is a college of Illinois State University, a public research university in Normal, Illinois. The college is divided into three groups: science and mathematics, social studies, and humanities. No evidence of notability is provided or appears to be readily available and notability cannot be inherited from the subject's unquestionably notable parent organization (ElKevbo)
2024-05-24 05:17 St. Xavier's College, Mapusa, Goa St. Xavier's College is a private Catholic university college located in the town of Mapusa (also spelt as Mapuca, Mapusa or Mapsa) in the district of North Goa, India. It is the largest and oldest college north of the Mandovi River in Goa, a state along the west coast of India. Not notable per NSCHOOL or GNG; no RS found during BEFORE search. (StartGrammarTime)
2024-05-28 23:00 2024 Oxford Action for Palestine Encampment The Oxford Action for Palestine Encampment (OA4P) is an ongoing protest encampment, created and led by Oxford Action for Palestine (OAP). Starting as a single encampment on the front lawn of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, a second encampment was created and related protest actions and occupations sprang up across Oxford. Created by WP:PIA-prohibited non-ECP user. Unclear notability outside of 2024 pro-Palestinian protests on university campuses. (Morbidthoughts)

History and Society/Military and warfare[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-24 23:00 731 Signal Squadron 731 Signal Squadron is a Canadian Army communication unit headquartered at Canadian Forces Base Shilo, near Brandon, Manitoba. The unit is responsible to provide communication information systems, strategic infrastructure services and support to Army Regular Force and Reserve Force units in Saskatchewan, Manitoba and northwestern Ontario. Fails WP:GNG. (Jlwoodwa)

History and Society/Politics and government[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-23 20:35 Leadership & Management Wales Leadership & Management Wales was an organisation funded by the Welsh Government and the European Social Fund to encourage the development of leadership and management skills among businesses in Wales. It was active between 2009 and 2014. This possibly defunct organisation article has insufficient references to establish notability. After searching, found same name or topic educational programs, but no comprehensive, in-depth coverage of this specific organisation. Article was created by a new user on 30 April 2012 (their only contribution to Wikipedia). (JoeNMLC)
2024-05-27 14:23 James Earl (grazier) (Merchant, cartage and cattle breeder) James Earl (1874-1907) was a merchant in Far North Queensland of cartage and started cattle breeding. Fails WP:GNG, lacks any substantial coverage in mutiple sources or references. Unable to draftify as draft already exists. Mainly original research. (Dan arndt)
2024-05-28 22:42 Luke Akehurst (British Politican, PR consultant, and member of the Labour Party NEC) Luke Akehurst (born 2 March 1972) is a British Labour party official, and former counciller. Since 2022, he has been a member of the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party, having also previously been on the NEC from 2010 untill 2012. Non-notable (TheTechie)

History and Society/Transportation[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-23 15:52 Ricaurte (TransMilenio) (Transmilenio stop) The transfer station Ricaurte is part of the TransMilenio mass-transit system of Bogotá, Colombia, opened in the year 2000. Subject is not notable, and no reliable sources could be found. (Sage or something)

STEM[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-25 14:28 Canonical transformation (disambiguation) (Topics referred to by the same term) Canonical Transformation may refer to: Disambiguation page not required (WP:ONEOTHER). Symplectomorphism is mentioned in the lead section of Canonical transformation (Shhhnotsoloud)
2024-05-26 03:43 Nik Elsmore (Rally Driver) Nicholas Oliver "Nik" Elsmore (born 28 June 1977) is a rally driver. No sources except a database. No claim of notability. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-27 05:06 Hell (slang) (English-language profanity) Hell is an English-language profanity and also pejorative slang word refers to the expression of anger issues and anger expression. It is also commonly used the utterance of swearing or for emphasis While its origin was based on a place regarded in various religions as a spiritual realm of evil and suffering, and people started using hell as curse word in the 1920s. Fails WP:GNG - lacks any sources or references (original research). (Dan arndt)
2024-05-27 03:50 Velocify (company) Velocify, Inc. is a cloud computing company, headquartered in El Segundo, California, that provides cloud-based intelligent sales automation software designed for fast-paced sales environments. Fails the notability guideline for companies. Sources are either trivial (routine announcements of funding, name changes, product releases, acquisitions, or winning insignificant awards), non-independent, or unreliable (Forbes contributors). Checked for decent sources under both "Velocify" and "Leads360" and could not find any. (Teratix)
2024-05-27 20:57 Guillaume Besse (entrepreneur) (French businessman (born 1971)) Guillaume Besse (born 7 August 1971) is a French entrepreneur and venture capitalist. I don't think the notability criteria has been met. The article was created by an apparent COI editor. (Risedemise)
2024-05-28 04:23 MEMX (microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technologies company, founded 2000) MEMX inc. was formed in October 2000 as a spin-off from Sandia National Laboratories' MicroElectoMechanical program, and was created to help commercialize Sandia's microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technologies. The MEMX technical team was instrumental in the formation of Sandia's MEMS program from 1990 to 2000. Fails WP:NCORP. (B3251)
2024-05-28 21:24 ZOOMQ3D ZOOMQ3D is a numerical finite-difference model, which simulates groundwater flow in aquifers. The program is used by hydrogeologists to investigate groundwater resources and to make predictions about possible future changes in their quantity and quality. Not a notable software package; no independent coverage. (Walsh90210)

STEM/Biology[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-28 22:41 Measure of Music (conference) Measure of Music (MoM) is a multiple day virtual conference for music industry professionals working in digital media, and is held annually online with hackathons in select cities. Formed in 2021, the globally focused conference is a free data tech conference and workshop aimed at fostering innovation and equity with the data sector of the music business. Evidently non-notable event (TheTechie)

STEM/Computing[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 05:50 BOND (Database form building system) BOND (Building Object Network Databases) started development in late 2000 as a rapid application development tool for the GNOME Desktop by Treshna Enterprises. Its aim was to fill a gap that traditional Microsoft Windows applications like Borland Delphi, Microsoft Access and Visual Basic filled on the Windows desktop, but targeted for the Linux environment. No citations other than primary source, can't find any secondary references to it (Joy)
2024-05-23 02:35 Barco ColorTone Barco ColorTone was a stripped-down version of the Barco Creator image manipulation program. It was originally developed for IRIX, and only featured the base "CT-Brix", brush and colour correction modules. An additional "image quality estimator" module, not featured in Creator, was also added. Fails WP: N -- if de-PRODing, please add multiple independent sources that cover the subject in-depth. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-23 05:14 Super Expander 64 Super Expander 64 is a cartridge-based extension to the built in BASIC interpreter of Commodore 64 home computer. It was published by Commodore Business Machines in 1983. The built-in BASIC of the C64 was adapted from the PET and VIC 20, and the language does not have direct support for the system's sound and graphics hardware. Fails WP:NSOFT (90.167.202.126)
2024-05-24 04:21 Yoix (high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming language) In computer programming, Yoix is a high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, object-based, dynamic programming language. The Yoix interpreter is implemented using standard Java technology without any add-on packages and requires only a Sun-compliant JVM to operate.[citation needed] Fails WP: N. The paper that proposed the language doesn't have any citations that could establish notability. There are also some potential WP: COI concerns on the Talk page, but sourcing is the main issue here. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 04:33 IBM HAScript (Programming language) HAScript, or Host Access Script, is an IBM-developed macro language with an XML syntax designed for programmatic interaction with terminal-based applications. HAScript is based on a state machine principle. The first commercial implementation appeared in IBM's Host On-Demand in the late 1990s. Fails WP: N. I can't find any sources that would establish notability. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 15:35 Little Smalltalk (non-standard dialect of the Smalltalk programming language) Little Smalltalk is a non-standard dialect and runtime system, a virtual machine referred to as "system", of the Smalltalk-80 programming language implemented by Timothy Budd at University of Arizona in 1984 along with a group of his students. It was originally described in a book "A Little Smalltalk" (1987), and was created as result of lack of cheap access to Smalltalk-80 runtime at the time; it was initially intended to run on Unix on a VAX-780. Fails WP: N. I did a quick scan through the citations of Budd's original paper where this language was proposed, and I couldn't find anything that would establish notability. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 16:24 FVWM95 (window manager) FVWM95 is a window manager for the X Window System based on the popular FVWM 2 window manager. It is similar to the original FVWM, but is designed to closely resemble the look of Windows 95. Fails WP: N. I can't find anything outside of some brief mentions in a small handful of books and articles. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 22:46 Pocket Smalltalk (Smalltalk environment) Pocket Smalltalk is a Smalltalk environment that runs in Microsoft Windows and cross-compiles on the Palm Pilot platform. Fails WP: N. I can't find anything about this subject aside from a few brief mentions in some books. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 22:42 Sakura HyperMedia Desktop (Open source dektop environment) Sakura HyperMedia Desktop is an open source desktop environment and knowledge navigator for Unix. It is written in scripting languages such as Python and Tcl, and therefore runs on a variety of platforms. The Sakura HyperMedia Desktop Project lists the main features as follows: Fails WP: N. I can't find any sources that would establish notability. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-23 11:20 Mallard BASIC (BASIC interpreter for CP/M written by Locomotive Software) Mallard BASIC is a BASIC interpreter for CP/M produced by Locomotive Software and supplied with the Amstrad PCW range of small business computers, the ZX Spectrum +3 version of CP/M Plus, and the Acorn BBC Micro's Zilog Z80 second processor. Fails WP:NSOFT (80.103.136.152)
2024-05-23 14:46 Dalim Tango (Dalim's product for colour retouching during the 1990s) Dalim Tango was a color retouching package aimed at the repro and prepress markets. It ran on Silicon Graphics workstations, and was first released in 1993. This retouching package is still available in the DALiM LiTHO program. As of 2013, LiTHO version 7 is available for both Linux and Mac OS X operating systems. Fails WP: N. I can't find anything outside of a mention in a magazine in 1993. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-26 16:31 XFast (Desktop environment) XFast is a lightweight desktop environment that incorporates a display manager and a window manager within the same process. It is portable and works on many devices (embedded devices, handhelds, set-top boxes,...). Here the communication between server layer and desktop layer can be made in classical way via TCP/IP but depending on the configuration and target system it can be done via shared memory too. This desktop environment doesn't meet WP:GNG at all. Zero WP:SIGCOV is available. (24.153.57.64)
2024-05-27 05:39 JOnAS (application server) JOnAS is an open-source implementation of the Java EE application server specification, developed and hosted by the OW2 consortium, having been originally been created by Groupe Bull. JOnAS is released under the LGPL 2.1 open-source license. Fails WP:NSOFT (90.167.219.246)
2024-05-24 02:00 F-Script (programming language) (object-oriented scripting programming language for Apple's macOS operating system) F-Script is an object-oriented scripting programming language for Apple's macOS operating system developed by Philippe Mougin. F-Script is an interactive language based on Smalltalk, using macOS's native Cocoa API. Fails WP: N. I found a passing mention in a book, but nothing more than that. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 23:57 Ambient (desktop environment) (MUI-based desktop environment for MorphOS) Ambient is a MUI-based desktop environment for MorphOS. Its development was started in 2001 by David Gerber. Its main goals were that it should be fully asynchronous, simple and fast. Ambient remotely resembles Workbench and Directory Opus Magellan trying to mix the best of both worlds. Fails WP: N. Aside from one brief mention in a book, I couldn't find any secondary coverage. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-27 13:36 Zingaya Zingaya was launched in North America on September 14, 2010 at the DEMO conference.[citation needed] Zingaya provides next generation click-to-call services. Using Adobe Flash-based Voice over Internet Protocol technology, the company provides an embedded widget that forwards an end user through a VoIP call to landlines, mobile phones, Skype accounts, or other computers – whichever the website operator has specified. Fails the notability guideline for companies. (Teratix)
2024-05-24 05:45 Liberty BASIC (commercial computer programming language and integrated development environment (IDE)) Liberty BASIC (LB) is a commercial computer programming language and integrated development environment (IDE). It has an interpreter, developed in Smalltalk, which recognizes its own dialect of the BASIC programming language. It runs on 16- and 32-bit Windows and OS/2. Fails WP:NSOFT (90.167.203.248)
2024-05-28 20:13 Apache Yetus Apache Yetus is a collection of libraries and tools that enable contribution and release processes for software projects. Portions are used by a wide variety of Apache projects, including Apache Hadoop and Apache HBase. Fails WP: N. I could only find a self-published tutorial on how to use Yetus for a specific use case, but this isn't necessarily reliable. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 20:21 AdaControl (Open source software) AdaControl is a free (GMGPL) tool that detects the use of various kinds of constructs in Ada programs. Its first goal is to control proper usage of style or programming rules, but it can also be used as a powerful tool to search for use (or non-use) of various forms of programming styles or design patterns. Fails WP: N. I can't find any sources that meet the criteria to establish notability, and all of the sources on the article at the time of PRODing are primary. I found one paper that uses the code to test a source code quality metric, but one of the authors is affiliate with Adalog. I couldn't find anything else that could establish notability -- if dePRODing, please provide better sourcing and add it to the article. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 21:02 Babel Middleware (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory language interoperability software) Babel is an open source middleware system serving the scientific computing community. As a language interoperability tool, Babel enables the arbitrary mixing of software libraries written in C/C++, Fortran, Python, and Java. As a distributed computing platform, Babel provides a language-neutral Remote Method Invocation (RMI) scheme similar to Java's RMI which allows third-party plug-ins to specify custom data encodings and network protocols. Fails WP: N. I can't find any sources that are secondary and cover the subject with enough depth to establish notability. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:06 DSPnano RTOS (Computer operating system) DSPnano is an embedded real-time operating system (RTOS) which is compatible with POSIX and embedded Linux. It was first created in 1996 and was one of the first pthread based real-time kernels. Its entire focus was on tiny real-time digital signal processing systems and has been optimized to deliver high performance DSP on embedded digital signal controllers and digital signal processors [21]. I cannot find any adequate sources discussing this operating system other than very brief mentions in stuff like "list of every operating system." The creator of the article also is the CEO of the company that made this making it an advertisement. (Schützenpanzer)
2024-05-28 22:26 FVWM-Crystal FVWM-Crystal is a theme framework for the FVWM window manager. It uses GUI tools to edit the look of windows, instead of the use of editing a text file in FVWM. It creates a desktop environment using FVWM as its window manager and main core. Fails WP: N. I can't find any reliable secondary sources that give this library more than a passing mention. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:30 K Desktop Environment 3 (Free software) K Desktop Environment 3 is the third series of releases of the K Desktop Environment (after that called KDE Software Compilation). There are six major releases in this series. After the release of KDE 4, version 3.5 was forked into the Trinity Desktop Environment. Fails WP: N. I found some self-published articles about KDE3, but nothing more. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:34 LUnix (Operating system) ± I could find no adequate coverage of this operating system in order to justify an article on it. Any mentions found were brief mentions mostly just copied from this article or a deluge of a people misspelling Linux, even in books. (Schützenpanzer)

STEM/Technology[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 05:50 BOND (Database form building system) BOND (Building Object Network Databases) started development in late 2000 as a rapid application development tool for the GNOME Desktop by Treshna Enterprises. Its aim was to fill a gap that traditional Microsoft Windows applications like Borland Delphi, Microsoft Access and Visual Basic filled on the Windows desktop, but targeted for the Linux environment. No citations other than primary source, can't find any secondary references to it (Joy)
2024-05-22 19:36 Datacoup (New York based start up company) Datacoup was a New York-based start up company that provides a marketplace for individuals to sell a feed of their personal data, such as social media activity and credit card transactions, to information brokers for a monthly fee. In November 2019, Datacoup issued an email to users stating that it was shutting down operations and will be decommissioning all of its servers. Doesn't seem to meet WP:CORP, all coverage was just of the launch of the company, no sustained media interest. Its closure apparently wasn't even reported on. (Here2rewrite)
2024-05-22 22:02 Power failure transfer In telecommunication, the term power failure transfer has the following meanings: Per WP:DICT. This article seems that it would belong better as an entry on Wiktionary rather than on Wikipedia. Proposing for deletion OR redirection as a Wiktionary entry. (B3251)
2024-05-23 02:35 Barco ColorTone Barco ColorTone was a stripped-down version of the Barco Creator image manipulation program. It was originally developed for IRIX, and only featured the base "CT-Brix", brush and colour correction modules. An additional "image quality estimator" module, not featured in Creator, was also added. Fails WP: N -- if de-PRODing, please add multiple independent sources that cover the subject in-depth. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-23 05:14 Super Expander 64 Super Expander 64 is a cartridge-based extension to the built in BASIC interpreter of Commodore 64 home computer. It was published by Commodore Business Machines in 1983. The built-in BASIC of the C64 was adapted from the PET and VIC 20, and the language does not have direct support for the system's sound and graphics hardware. Fails WP:NSOFT (90.167.202.126)
2024-05-24 04:21 Yoix (high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming language) In computer programming, Yoix is a high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, object-based, dynamic programming language. The Yoix interpreter is implemented using standard Java technology without any add-on packages and requires only a Sun-compliant JVM to operate.[citation needed] Fails WP: N. The paper that proposed the language doesn't have any citations that could establish notability. There are also some potential WP: COI concerns on the Talk page, but sourcing is the main issue here. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 04:33 IBM HAScript (Programming language) HAScript, or Host Access Script, is an IBM-developed macro language with an XML syntax designed for programmatic interaction with terminal-based applications. HAScript is based on a state machine principle. The first commercial implementation appeared in IBM's Host On-Demand in the late 1990s. Fails WP: N. I can't find any sources that would establish notability. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 12:26 Helianthos On 8 September 2011 Nuon announced the pilot plant would be closed down since no investor for production expansion could be found. However, on 7 May 2012 Nuon announced that Helianthos has been sold to HyET Solar. This pilot plant article has insufficient references to establish notability. After searching, found other uses with the same name, but no comprehensive, in-depth coverage. Article was created by a new user on 22 April 2006 (their only contribution to Wikipedia). (JoeNMLC)
2024-05-24 15:35 Little Smalltalk (non-standard dialect of the Smalltalk programming language) Little Smalltalk is a non-standard dialect and runtime system, a virtual machine referred to as "system", of the Smalltalk-80 programming language implemented by Timothy Budd at University of Arizona in 1984 along with a group of his students. It was originally described in a book "A Little Smalltalk" (1987), and was created as result of lack of cheap access to Smalltalk-80 runtime at the time; it was initially intended to run on Unix on a VAX-780. Fails WP: N. I did a quick scan through the citations of Budd's original paper where this language was proposed, and I couldn't find anything that would establish notability. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-24 22:46 Pocket Smalltalk (Smalltalk environment) Pocket Smalltalk is a Smalltalk environment that runs in Microsoft Windows and cross-compiles on the Palm Pilot platform. Fails WP: N. I can't find anything about this subject aside from a few brief mentions in some books. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-23 14:46 Dalim Tango (Dalim's product for colour retouching during the 1990s) Dalim Tango was a color retouching package aimed at the repro and prepress markets. It ran on Silicon Graphics workstations, and was first released in 1993. This retouching package is still available in the DALiM LiTHO program. As of 2013, LiTHO version 7 is available for both Linux and Mac OS X operating systems. Fails WP: N. I can't find anything outside of a mention in a magazine in 1993. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-26 12:20 Hua Qing minigun (Chinese Gatling-type machine gun) The Hua Qing minigun is a Chinese Gatling-type machine gun. The weapon is chambered in the 7.62×54mmR round, and was introduced at the 2009 Anti Terrorist Trade Show at Beijing. Mix-up (gun actually made by Jianshe 建设), not notable (no other sources with SIGCOV found) (MSG17)
2024-05-26 16:31 XFast (Desktop environment) XFast is a lightweight desktop environment that incorporates a display manager and a window manager within the same process. It is portable and works on many devices (embedded devices, handhelds, set-top boxes,...). Here the communication between server layer and desktop layer can be made in classical way via TCP/IP but depending on the configuration and target system it can be done via shared memory too. This desktop environment doesn't meet WP:GNG at all. Zero WP:SIGCOV is available. (24.153.57.64)
2024-05-27 05:39 JOnAS (application server) JOnAS is an open-source implementation of the Java EE application server specification, developed and hosted by the OW2 consortium, having been originally been created by Groupe Bull. JOnAS is released under the LGPL 2.1 open-source license. Fails WP:NSOFT (90.167.219.246)
2024-05-24 02:00 F-Script (programming language) (object-oriented scripting programming language for Apple's macOS operating system) F-Script is an object-oriented scripting programming language for Apple's macOS operating system developed by Philippe Mougin. F-Script is an interactive language based on Smalltalk, using macOS's native Cocoa API. Fails WP: N. I found a passing mention in a book, but nothing more than that. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-27 13:36 Zingaya Zingaya was launched in North America on September 14, 2010 at the DEMO conference.[citation needed] Zingaya provides next generation click-to-call services. Using Adobe Flash-based Voice over Internet Protocol technology, the company provides an embedded widget that forwards an end user through a VoIP call to landlines, mobile phones, Skype accounts, or other computers – whichever the website operator has specified. Fails the notability guideline for companies. (Teratix)
2024-05-28 20:13 Apache Yetus Apache Yetus is a collection of libraries and tools that enable contribution and release processes for software projects. Portions are used by a wide variety of Apache projects, including Apache Hadoop and Apache HBase. Fails WP: N. I could only find a self-published tutorial on how to use Yetus for a specific use case, but this isn't necessarily reliable. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 20:21 AdaControl (Open source software) AdaControl is a free (GMGPL) tool that detects the use of various kinds of constructs in Ada programs. Its first goal is to control proper usage of style or programming rules, but it can also be used as a powerful tool to search for use (or non-use) of various forms of programming styles or design patterns. Fails WP: N. I can't find any sources that meet the criteria to establish notability, and all of the sources on the article at the time of PRODing are primary. I found one paper that uses the code to test a source code quality metric, but one of the authors is affiliate with Adalog. I couldn't find anything else that could establish notability -- if dePRODing, please provide better sourcing and add it to the article. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:06 DSPnano RTOS (Computer operating system) DSPnano is an embedded real-time operating system (RTOS) which is compatible with POSIX and embedded Linux. It was first created in 1996 and was one of the first pthread based real-time kernels. Its entire focus was on tiny real-time digital signal processing systems and has been optimized to deliver high performance DSP on embedded digital signal controllers and digital signal processors [22]. I cannot find any adequate sources discussing this operating system other than very brief mentions in stuff like "list of every operating system." The creator of the article also is the CEO of the company that made this making it an advertisement. (Schützenpanzer)
2024-05-28 22:26 FVWM-Crystal FVWM-Crystal is a theme framework for the FVWM window manager. It uses GUI tools to edit the look of windows, instead of the use of editing a text file in FVWM. It creates a desktop environment using FVWM as its window manager and main core. Fails WP: N. I can't find any reliable secondary sources that give this library more than a passing mention. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:30 K Desktop Environment 3 (Free software) K Desktop Environment 3 is the third series of releases of the K Desktop Environment (after that called KDE Software Compilation). There are six major releases in this series. After the release of KDE 4, version 3.5 was forked into the Trinity Desktop Environment. Fails WP: N. I found some self-published articles about KDE3, but nothing more. (HyperAccelerated)
2024-05-28 22:34 LUnix (Operating system) ± I could find no adequate coverage of this operating system in order to justify an article on it. Any mentions found were brief mentions mostly just copied from this article or a deluge of a people misspelling Linux, even in books. (Schützenpanzer)

Unsorted[edit]

PROD date Article Excerpt Concern
2024-05-22 04:02 List of chiefs of the Wolf Clan of the Lenape The following were chiefs of the Wolf Clan of the Lenape (Delaware) tribe: Unreferences for more than 7 years; only five entries and two are redlinked; there is no single "Lenape tribe" now and wasn't in the late late 18th and early 19th centuries either (Yuchitown)
2024-05-24 11:45 Rolex Series (Topics referred to by the same term) Rolex Series may refer to: Per WP:ONEOTHER, the page should be deleted, Rolex Series (golf) moved back to this title, and a hatnote added on the page to link to Rolex Sports Car Series. (Broc)
2024-05-26 03:45 Scott Swain (American academic) Scott R. Swain is an American academic who is the James Woodrow Hassell Professor of Systematic Theology and President of the Orlando campus of Reformed Theological Seminary. No sources except faculty page. Doesn't seem to meet WP:NACADEMIC. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-26 03:51 Mohamed Maged Eldeeb (university president) Mohamed Maged Mohamed Ali Khalil Eldeeb is the former president[when?] of Ain Shams University. No sources besides university webpage. Doesn't seem to meet WP:NBIO. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-26 03:42 Robb Huxley (British musician) Robert William Huxley, known as Robb Huxley (born 4 December 1945) is a British vocalist, guitarist and musician. No sources besides personal website. No claim of notability. (Jlwoodwa)
2024-05-28 07:35 List of AGM title holders This is a list of Arena Grandmaster (AGM) title holders from FIDE Online Arena, No evidence found that this grouping meets WP:LISTN. (Fram)
2024-05-28 07:33 List of AIM title holders This is a list of Arena International Master title holders from FIDE Online Arena. No evidence that this lower level title has received attention as a group, fails WP:LISTN. (Fram)