This is the logical continuation of T101151: Evaluate which projects showcased at the Wikimedia Hackathon should be supported further.
The candidates are listed in T102034: Wikimania 2015 Hackathon Showcase. We need to make a selection, and for that we need to define the criteria to select them.
Principles
Features of a certain size
We are including projects that pursue new features and that imply a significant amount of work. Bugfixes and small tasks have been excluded.
Powered by volunteering
The main purpose of this selection is to highlight projects where volunteers are either drivers or essential co-pilots. Projects driven entirely by WMF teams are excluded, since these teams have the means to push these projects through their team goals. Projects driven by WMF developers in their volunteer capacity (i.e. in areas different then their usual work) are included.
Community consensus
Projects without community consensus have been excluded, since those discussions would need to happen first.
Selection
Promoted for Outreachy-Round-11
- T103623: Make a dashboard available for Art+Feminism and other English Wikipedia editing outreach events (Education Programs) (merged with T91676: [Epic] Make the Education program dashboard usable for all languages and projects, a Outreachy-Round-11 project idea)
Related with the Wikimedia Developer Summit 2016
- T88728: Improve Wikimedia dumping infrastructure (WMF support, the discussion continues at T114019: Dumps 2.0 for realz (planning/architecture session))
- T105638: RFC: Streamlining Composer usage (it was a small meeting, now a Wikimedia-Developer-Summit-2016 proposal, on track)
To be clarified
- T91201: [GOAL] Accessibility settings/preferences on desktop and mobile (WMF driven, candidate for a quarterly goal or for Possible-Tech-Projects?)
Don't need help
- T104024: Define a CI entry point for Ruby code
- T106240: SVG files color cannot be overriden
- T105789: A new panoramic viewer for commons
- T106094: Add support for wikidata tag to iD (OpenStreetMap)
- T104729: Refactor private LCATools codebase to split repetitive code into classes and move modules that can be public onto Labs for others to use
- T100088: Surfacing image content gap on Wikipedia