Commons:Wiki Loves Monuments 2015/Who's who

From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Wiki Loves Monuments — just like all projects of the Wikimedia movement — is almost entirely run by volunteers. Its success has been achieved thanks to the involvement of hundreds of participants interested in preserving cultural heritage of their countries and building the biggest free media repository in the world.

This page is intended to be an overview of the volunteers involved as well as of their responsibilities for the 2015 edition; for each person, there will be also information on how to reach them, but for more general matters, please consider consulting the central discussion page of the project first, and use alternatively the the international mailing list.

Romaine[edit]

float
float

Romaine has been a contributor to Wikimedia projects since 2003; over the years helping out as administrator of several wikis, GLAM volunteer for Wikimedia Nederland, publisher of This Month in GLAM. He's often fixing template problems, active with bots, and is since 2010 involved with the organization of Wiki Loves Monuments. For this photo contest he mostly does on-wiki technical support with templates and the upload wizard, translations and checking images. In 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 he organized the photo contest in Belgium and Luxembourg.

In 2015, Romaine will be responsible for the campaigns and upload wizards, translations of those pages, navigational structure of the Commons:Wiki Loves Monuments pages, categories for the contest, and supporting the contest in general. If you have any questions related to these subjects, feel free to ask!

You can reach him on his talk page, via email at Romaine.wiki@gmail.com or on the IRC channel #wikilovesmonuments on Freenode. If it concerns the campaigns and upload wizards it is preferable you use the talk page of the upload campaigns. The quickest response you will get by IRC, secondary via the talk page. Try to use e-mail as little as possible because of the too many e-mails send in the last days of August.