Randomness Guide to London - Differences between Version 2 and Version 1 of Easy Ways To Contribute

Version 2 Version 1
== Line 2 ==
==== You don't have to be an expert ====

Really. You don't have to know a lot about London in order to add something. Even a note like "the Sunday roast here is really good!" added to a pub page, or "there's a secure place to park your bike round the side" added to a restaurant page, or "if it's rush hour, go to the left-hand side of the platform; it's less crowded there" added to a Tube station page, is useful information — and even though these little things are very helpful, they're the sort of thing that never gets mentioned by mainstream guides.


Here are a few ideas for easy ways to contribute to the guide. You know, if you're bored at work or whatever. Some of these things only take a couple of minutes.

Find some good links, and add them

Most of the Good Beer Guide pubs only have stub entries; we put them in like that so they'd show up on a location search. If you've got a couple of minutes free, go and pick one, and if it's not got a full writeup, see if you can find some interesting reviews of it on the interweb, and link to them.

Most of the Tube and DLR stations are also stub pages, for the same reason. We'd like to have all those pages link to the corresponding Wikipedia entry, but we couldn't do that automagically since the URLs aren't entirely predictable (some of them mention Tube in the URL, some mention rail). Something quick you can do is pick a page in one of those categories, and add the Wikipedia link if it's not there already.

Add some suitably-licensed photos from Flickr

Lots and lots of lovely photographers have put up and tagged photos of London things on Flickr. Click the Random Page link in the sidebar, and if that page is a pub or restaurant or something, and hasn't got a photo associated with it, see if you can find one on Flickr (make sure to check that the licence allows re-use — if in doubt, don't use it) and add it to the page.

To do this, pick a smallish version, copy the URL of the download link, and put that in the "URL to node Image field"; this image, at this size, will show up on the page itself. Put the photographer's Flickr ID in the "Node Image Copyright" field, and the URL of the main Flickr page for that photo in the "Node Image URL" field. This may sound a bit complicated but once you've done it once it's quite easy. Check a page that already has a Flickr image on it (e.g. Angel, SE16 4NB) if you want to check you're doing it right (click on "Edit this page" to see how the fields are filled out, then "Cancel edit" to go back to the page as it was).


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