Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications: Difference between revisions
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===[[:IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications]]===▼
:''The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's [[Help:Using talk pages|talk page]] or in a [[Wikipedia:Deletion review|deletion review]]). No further edits should be made to this page.''
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The result was '''no consensus'''__EXPECTED_UNCONNECTED_PAGE__. I don't see a consensus here in this discussion and there are enough comments at this point about journals and notabiity that I don't think further relistings will clarify the divided opinion. I realize that this closure might be challenged again at DRV but I think that could happen with any possible closure decision (Keep, Delete, Redirect or Merge). Editors advocating a Merge or Redirect can continue this discussion on the article talk page but I think it is time to bring this discussion to a close. <span style="font-family:Papyrus; color:#800080;">[[User:Liz|'''''L'''''iz]]</span> <sup style="font-family: Times New Roman; color: #006400;">[[Special:Contributions/Liz|'''''Read!''''']] [[User talk:Liz|'''''Talk!''''']]</sup> 23:27, 1 November 2023 (UTC)
▲===[[:IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications]]===
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:{{la|1=IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications}} – (<includeonly>[[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications|View AfD]]</includeonly><noinclude>[[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Log/2023 October 25#{{anchorencode:IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications}}|View log]]</noinclude> | [[Special:Diff/1179938576/cur|edits since nomination]])
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* '''Redirect to [[List of IEEE publications]]''': fails [[WP:GNG]]. [https://meridian.allenpress.com/american-archivist/article/56/3/546/23662/A-Review-of-Information-Science-and-Computer Ruller 1993]'s coverage is <del>3</del> <ins>4</ins> sentences long. [https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Computer_Graphics_Manual/DX4YstV76c4C?gbpv=1&pg=PA21 Saloman 2011]'s coverage is 2 sentences long. Neither are [[WP:SIGCOV]]. I don't see anything else that is. The editors who are voting to keep, who appealed the earlier closure, and who voted to overturn and relist this, are all wasting a huge amount of editor time. Shame on you all, come up with an independent source longer than <del>3</del> <ins>4</ins> sentences, get our guidelines changed, or let it go. [[User:Levivich|Levivich]] ([[User talk:Levivich|talk]]) 00:33, 27 October 2023 (UTC) <!--VCB Levivich-->
*:I notice you didn't even mention the two-page magazine article entirely about the 1988 cover image. Cherry-picking much? Another newly added reference, Chen, Paul, & O'Keefe, is also almost entirely about the content of this journal (as a test case for the citation analysis proposed by the authors). Also, learn to count. Ruller is four sentences long, but one of those sentences is quite long (as long as the other three put together). —[[User:David Eppstein|David Eppstein]] ([[User talk:David Eppstein|talk]]) 00:52, 27 October 2023 (UTC)
*::You're right, Ruller 1993 is 4 sentences, not 3. Unfortunately, that doesn't change the overall length of the coverage (even if one of the sentences is quite long), and so it doesn't change my opinion about Ruller 1993 not providing SIGCOV. <p>I can't access the 1989 Holosphere article, but based on your description of it, what it's cited for in the Wikipedia article, and a Google snippet, it appears to be an article about a hologram called "The Tin Toy" that appeared on the cover of IEEE CG&A, but not about CG&A itself. If the Holosphere article has SIGCOV -- like more than 4 sentences (however long) or one paragraph -- about CG&A itself (and not the hologram on the cover), maybe you can paste some excerpts here and we can take a look at it. If it's SIGCOV about CG&A, it would count towards GNG and we'd be halfway there. </p><p>[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/859766 Chen 2000], a conference paper published by IEEE, is probably not an independent source and so not GNG, but also doesn't have SIGCOV, as all it seems to say about CG&A is {{tqq|IEEE CG&A was launched in 1981 ... IEEE CG&A as a prestigious journal reflects significant aspects of computer graphics. Of course, it is not the only journal in the field. There are a vast amount of publications in the literature on this subject.}} and the rest is about a dataset of IEEE CG&A articles the author used to create an author co-citation map as an example of ___domain visualization (if I understood the paper correctly, which I probably didn't). [[User:Levivich|Levivich]] ([[User talk:Levivich|talk]]) 02:05, 27 October 2023 (UTC)</p>
*:::"a conference paper published by IEEE"
*:::The IEEE is an organization with a membership that's near a half million engineers in pretty much every country in the world. It is literally the most respected engineering society in the world. If you want to exclude IEEE papers from consideration, you're literally nixing 5 million publications, covering over nearly anywhere from a quarter to half the engineering papers in the world, from those that would be most qualified to write about these things in the first place.  <span style="font-variant:small-caps; whitespace:nowrap;">[[User:Headbomb|Headbomb]] {[[User talk:Headbomb|t]] · [[Special:Contributions/Headbomb|c]] · [[WP:PHYS|p]] · [[WP:WBOOKS|b]]}</span> 04:44, 27 October 2023 (UTC)
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**::I suppose so. It has 4 very short paragraphs, including the lede, of anything that's not filler. IMO that's pretty stubby, but I could see how others could disagree. [[User:Hobit|Hobit]] ([[User talk:Hobit|talk]]) 03:15, 29 October 2023 (UTC)
:::{{u|Hobit}}: I really can't see how merge would work in this instance? [[List of IEEE publications]] has hundreds of publications, with no text about any of them. [[User:Espresso Addict|Espresso Addict]] <small>([[User talk:Espresso Addict|talk]])</small> 22:06, 29 October 2023 (UTC)
::::Yeah, as I thought about it more I reached the conclusion it would be a major change and so maybe a keep is better. But I think a bare list, as we have now, is a bit useless. I'd think we could do something like a "list of episodes" thing and split magazines from journals. Still a long list, but not a crazy one. Include years active, how often it's published and some details about each one (say under 500 words). Given that is such a huge change, I do think that a keep is probably the right answer for now. [[User:Hobit|Hobit]] ([[User talk:Hobit|talk]]) 23:15, 29 October 2023 (UTC)
:::::The idea was presumably just to list blue links, but few editors are masochistic enough to bother systematically creating articles on academic journals at present. [[User:Espresso Addict|Espresso Addict]] <small>([[User talk:Espresso Addict|talk]])</small> 23:57, 29 October 2023 (UTC)
::::Like [[User:Hobit]], I believe this is quite possible. If the text of [[List of IEEE publications]] gets too long, it can be broken down by publication type (e.g. journals, magazines) and subsequently field (EE, SE, etc.). [[User:Suriname0|Suriname0]] ([[User talk:Suriname0|talk]]) 23:21, 29 October 2023 (UTC)
:::::What advantage would this have over just having separate articles for each publication? Lumping stuff together doesn't really improve notability (because now you have to find sources about the whole collection, not necessarily easier than finding sources about the individual members) and doesn't help readers find information about individual publications (for instance when following links to those publications from references on other articles). So who benefits from it? —[[User:David Eppstein|David Eppstein]] ([[User talk:David Eppstein|talk]]) 00:15, 30 October 2023 (UTC)
:::::::Benefit is that the publications that don't meet WP:N would have a place to have basic info. I think that's an improvement. [[User:Hobit|Hobit]] ([[User talk:Hobit|talk]]) 15:33, 30 October 2023 (UTC)
::::::I do think it's much easier to show notability for the collection; in searching for sources discussing CG&A, I found several nice sources discussing e.g. the history of IEEE computer graphics publications, or the history of IEEE magazines. All the big publishers seem to attract coverage in a way that individual journals rarely do. Anyway, it benefits readers if it prevents fragmentation of information and provides context on under-covered (aka non-notable) topics, as Hobit says. But benefit is the crux of the issue, right? There are lots of non-notable topics that would benefit readers if we covered them in stand-alone articles, cf. the on-going debates about sport bios, or [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Google Chrome version history (2nd nomination)|Google Chrome version history]], etc. I think Wikipedia is probably worse if we allowed thousands of non-notable trade publications to put up a free marketing page, and I think Wikipedia is probably better if we allowed thousands of non-notable academic publications to put up a free marketing page. It's not a surprise I'm biased in favor of the academic journals and think they're useful, but until we have a policy that reflects a consensus beyond my personal biases in favor of academics, I'm reticent to explicitly endorse it. [[User:Suriname0|Suriname0]] ([[User talk:Suriname0|talk]]) 16:45, 30 October 2023 (UTC)
:::::::Perhaps you could add those sources to [[List of IEEE publications]], to demonstrate that it is actually notable as a list and viable as a merge target. Currently it only has non-independent sources. —[[User:David Eppstein|David Eppstein]] ([[User talk:David Eppstein|talk]]) 17:49, 30 October 2023 (UTC)
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