Jump to content

User:RogueScholar

From Outreach Wiki
Committed identity: BBD4BC58C50D7993BD1A92589012AA5BF0CDC3541E2F24CFFCC4B244F6AF476B61D0D2C89F0B8EA394E8C4F025A5172C5C8FBD887874793E225E5CA23C081702 is a SHA-512 commitment to this user's real-life identity.
RogueScholar
Forever falling short of his own expectations
Wikimedian
Born (1981-08-16) August 16, 1981 (age 43)
Fort Bragg, California, USA
NationalityAmerican
CountryUnited States of America
EthnicityPortuguese: 50% / Finnish: 25% / Swedish: 25%
RaceCaucasian
Height182 cm
Weight97 kg
HairBlack
EyesHazel
HandednessRight
Blood typeA positive
SexualityPansexual
IQ142
Personality typeISTP
Family and friends
Marital statusSingle (Never married)
Siblings1 younger brother
Pets2 cats
Education and employment
OccupationSystems analyst
High schoolFort Bragg High School
CollegeUniversity of California, Berkeley
UniversityOregon State University
Hobbies, favourites and beliefs
ReligionAtheism
PoliticsDemocratic socialist
AliasesPoopDawg (yeah, don't ask)
MoviesPeople Will Talk, The Mission, The Sunset Limited, The Godfather
ShowsThe West Wing, The Practice, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Damages
BooksMan's Search for Meaning, The Myth of Sisyphus, Letter to His Father, Slaughterhouse-Five, The Lord of the Rings
Contact info
Websitehttps://trakt.peterjmello.com/
Bloghttps://www.pjm.one/
Emailadmin@petermello.net
ICQ1604526
XMPPviceemperor816@livejournal.com
IRCRogueScholar on Freenode
InstagramSingularErgoSum
LinkedInpeterjmello
PinterestSingularErgoSum
TwitterSingularErgoSum
YouTubeRogueScholar420
Flickrpetermello
RogueScholar subpages
Account statistics
JoinedOctober 13, 2003
First editOctober 13, 2003
ConfirmedOctober 23, 2003
Signature🐈⚞ogueScholar⚟🗨₨Talk
Userboxes
This user tries to do the right thing. If he makes a mistake, please let him know.

Rude or speedy deletions of articles and categories drive away editors and donations.

961+This user has made over 961 contributions to Wikimedia projects .

iD


incl This editor holds an inclusionist philosophy.


This user loves Wikidata.

This user comes from
the United States.

This user is a programmer.


User language
en-N This user has a native understanding of English.
pt-2 Este utilizador tem um nível médio de português.
es-2 Este usuario tiene un conocimiento intermedio del español.
fi-0 Tämä käyttäjä osaa hyvin vähän tai ei lainkaan suomea.
Users by language

About Me

I've been a contributor to Wikimedia projects since October 13, 2003 when I created an account at English Wikipedia. I wouldn't have predicted then that more than 15 years later I would still be active here... Honestly, the fact that I've remembered all the various passwords I've used for this account along the way is even more remarkable.

What brought me here originally was moving to Corvallis, Oregon to pursue a second baccalaureate and very quickly contracting a strain of what can only be described as rabid fandom for the school's athletics teams, the Beavers, something I missed out on during my first round of college student life. I remember visiting the Oregon State University page back then and being aghast at how poorly it represented my new font of all things black and orange... Oh, wait a second, this can't be right. I just typed in the name of our football stadium in the search box, hit Enter...and THERE'S NOT EVEN A PATHETIC STUB PAGE?!?!?! WHAT KIND OF ENCYCLOPEDIA DO YOU THINK YOU'RE RUNNING HERE WHEN YOU DON'T HAVE A PAGE FOR THE GREATEST PLACE ON EARTH?!?!?!

Apologies for the shouting, I'm a passionate person by nature and in those days lacked much restraint. I didn't pound my fist on the desk or anything, I'm a man of letters and abhor caveman antics, but some visible gaseous by-products of combustion did certainly exit my ears.

So yeah, that's pretty much how it started with Wikipedia and me. I did an honest, but in hindsight. mediocre job of developing the school's page. It goes without saying that I damn well created a page for Reser Stadium that I still think added a significant amount of legitimacy to this whole endeavour back in those formative years. I created a category for the athletic conference we belong to, and then for years did little more than putter around with other articles as the interest and opportunity arose, which was incidental and very infrequently. Then before I could ever believe it, someone contacted me about my 20-year high school reunion. I bravely fought back the tears until the call was over, but what happened then wasn't a pretty sight. If there was ever a day that I questioned my commitment to sobriety...well, you get the picture.

The reunion was predictably awful. I never fit in with my classmates then, which was as much my fault as theirs. Social skills exist decidedly on an axis of integers, which include all the positive and negative whole numbers, and at the time you needed binoculars to see how deep in negative territory mine were. Further compounding matters was the ugly truth that we all seemed about as haggard and disaffected as you would expect the vanguard of Generation X to appear at their first significant high school reunion, and I fear that we're nowhere near the nadir of our arc yet.

In the weeks that followed though I was plagued by the sense that I was not at all at the place in life where my high school self would've imagined I'd be. More to the point, I wasn't behaving like the man that should've grown out of that promising but socially inept boy from high school. Where was the commitment to making a difference in the world that drew me to join Greenpeace back in junior high? Where was the guy who spent his lunches digitizing the school library's entire periodical collection during junior year when computers replaced the card catalog, just because he wanted to leave things in better shape than he found them? Where was...a lot of stuff. It's easy to trick yourself into thinking that your late 30s are precisely the time to be myopic and self-interested and crush it on the career path, but that does a profound disservice to the roughly ten or twelve faces that weren't at the reunion because they couldn't be bothered, but rather because their Earthly affairs had come to a detestably early conclusion. I should've taken a picture of that poster board covered with photos of them, but really there wasn't a need, it's the kind of thing that appears to stick with you.

So I'm back here again! Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. No surprise I'm working on the Wiki page of another school, this time it's my old high school. Believe it or not but it was in worse shape than the one for OSU was all the way back in '03. And true to form, I'm doing another mediocre job at improving it, though this time I have the consolation of all the infernal bureaucracy you all have created while I was mostly kibitzing. Where's the fast-and-loose rush to "write now, source later" that seemed so innocent and joyous when I started out? Parts of it weren't pretty, I'll admit, but I think most of it turned out fairly well in the end. Now? Your clicky finger barely has time to get off the Publish button and here comes some editor who, hand to God, has 7,000 edits to his name, 92.3% of which are removing what others have written because it's not formatted "according to Hoyle" or because your source (while valid and authoritative) was six or seven years old. Looks like I came back not a moment too soon.

We're gonna crank up the boombox and edit with one hand while playing foosball with the other like the old days, okay? Sure, some rules are important but let's not lose sight of the fact that the holes aren't even a tenth of the way filled yet! We're still better served mostly using shovels to keep filling them in and not grabbing the soil compactor every few hours to level the loose fill. At least that's how I see it, though this place has a funny way of changing one's perspective on a lot of unforeseen topics, or hadn't you noticed? ;)

RogueScholar's Wikimedia accounts:
Wikipedia Meta Commons Wikidata Wikivoyage Wikiquote MediaWiki Foundation
Wiktionary Wikibooks Wikisource Wikiversity Wikispecies Wikinews Phabricator Outreach