Universal Edit Button

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Universal Edit Button
Original author(s)Travis Derouin
Initial releaseJune 19, 2008
PlatformCross-platform
TypeBrowser extension
Websiteuniversaleditbutton.org

The Universal Edit Button is a green pencil icon in the address bar of a web browser that indicates whether a web page on the World Wide Web (most often a wiki) is editable. It is similar to the orange "broadcast" RSS icon () that indicates that there is a web feed available. Clicking the icon opens the edit window. It was invented by a collaborative team of wiki enthusiasts, including Ward Cunningham, Jack Herrick, and many others.

History

The first version of the button, created in 2008

The concept was first conceived during the 2007 RecentChangesCamp in Montreal. After the next RecentChangesCamp, coding began by Travis Derouin, Brion Vibber and other programmers, the button was officially launched on June 19, 2008.[1]

Conversations on this idea started at RoCoCo (a RecentChangesCamp) in Montreal in 2007,[2] and discussions continued on the AboutUs wiki.[3] At the Palo Alto RCC in 2008, a handful of people[who?] explored the idea, got excited about the ability to have the button automatically detected by browsers, and helped spread the idea.[citation needed]

Description

A screenshot from WikiIndex.org showing the Universal Edit Button in action

The Universal Editing Button (UEB) is intended to enable an internet user to quickly recognize when a website—such as a wiki—may be edited. According to the UEB's creators, "it is a convenience to web surfers who are already inclined to contribute, and an invitation to those who have yet to discover the thrill of building a common resource. As this kind of public editing becomes more commonplace, the button may become regarded as a badge of honor. It serves as an incentive to encourage companies and site developers to add publicly-editable components to their sites, in order to have the UEB displayed for their sites."

Tim Berners-Lee's initial vision for the web was a read-write medium.[4] However, as the web matured, very few web sites offered users the ability to write or edit. The web became primarily a "read only" medium. In the 2000s, wikis spread the concept that the web could be editable. The success of Wikipedia, and the increasing utility of wikis like wikiHow, AboutUs.org, Wikivoyage and Wikia demonstrated the possibility that open editing could create usable information resources.[5]

Implementation

The plug-ins on a browser side recognize the specific form of the alternative link specification in HTML fragment:[6]

 <link rel="alternate"
   type="application/x-wiki"
   title="Welcome to edit this page!"
   href="wiki?edit=myEditLink"/>

The href part tag species the edit page that corresponds with the page being viewed. Every server that is capable and willing to support the user editing can include this fragment and this way enable the button. Hence the button support can be relatively easily added to various web applications if the source code is available. The tag does not put any requirements on the details about the editing session itself and simply brings to the page where the user would also come by clicking on Edit tab (or similar). The button is normally used in the user editable pages, so no maintainer-only credentials should be asked to start a valid editing session. If only registered (logged in) users can edit, the button should bring to the register/login form.

Plug-ins are currently available for Firefox,[7] Opera,[8] Epiphany,[9] and Chrome[10] (there is ongoing work to support Internet Explorer[11]).

Websites

Websites supporting the Universal Edit Button include wikiHow, AboutUs.org, Wikimedia (including Wikipedia, Wiktionary, Wikimedia Commons and all other Wikimedia projects[12]), MediaWiki software, DokuWiki,[13] MoinMoin, PhpWiki, Socialtext,[14] TWiki,[15] the Creative Commons wiki,[16] Foodista, Wikia, PBworks,[17] WikkaWiki,[18] Memory Alpha, Wired's How-To blog,[19] WordPress (as a plug-in[20]), and many others. Currently,[when?] the project's website lists over 80 other websites that have implemented support for the button.

References

  1. ^ Cleaver, Martin (2008-06-19). "The Universal Edit button launches today". WikiSym. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  2. ^ "RoCoCo". Rocococamp.info. 2008-04-30. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  3. ^ Discussions on the AboutUs wiki — AboutUs.org
  4. ^ Tim Berners-Lee (2005-12-12). "So I have a blog". Decentralized Information Group (DIG). Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  5. ^ "About the Universal Edit Button". Universaleditbutton.org. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  6. ^ Documentation, how to implement the button on the server side
  7. ^ Firefox plug-in
  8. ^ Opera plug-in
  9. ^ Epiphany plug-in page
  10. ^ Chrome plug-in page
  11. ^ Project page, dedicated to Internet Explorer support
  12. ^ "Wikimedia announcement". Blog.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  13. ^ Gohr, Andreas (2008-06-20). "plugin:ueb". DokuWiki. Retrieved 2009-06-11.
  14. ^ Niall Kennedy (2008-06-28). "Socialtext announcement". Socialtext.com. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  15. ^ "TWiki announcement". Twiki.org. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  16. ^ "Creative Commons announcement". Creativecommons.org. 2008-06-22. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  17. ^ "PBwiki announcement". Blog.pbwiki.com. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  18. ^ "WikkaWiki announcement". Docs.wikkawiki.org. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  19. ^ Wikis Rally Around Universal Edit Button — Webmonkey
  20. ^ "WordPress plugin". Universaleditbutton.org. Retrieved 2009-03-17.

External links