Posts Tagged ‘wikipedia’

Six-and-Twenty

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

In preparation of my potential career as a journalist, I have ripped the following facts from Wikipedia and present them to you completely unverified:

26 (number):

Cardinal twenty-six
Ordinal 26th
(twenty-sixth)
Factorization  2 \cdot 13
Divisors 1, 2, 13, 26
Roman numeral XXVI
Binary 110102
Octal 328
Duodecimal 2212
Hexadecimal 1A16

In mathematics

Pierre de Fermat proved that 26 is the only number between a square (25 = 52) and a cube (27 = 33).

In science

In religion

In other fields

Twenty-six is:

26 is also the number of years since my birth, according to a source that does not wish to be identified.

Popularity: 33% [?]

Dead Men Tell No Tales

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

A telling article on MSN.com shows how reliant on Wikipedia modern journalism has become, much to the truth’s detriment. Shane Fitzgerald, college student in Ireland, posted a fake quote on recently deceased Oscar-winning French composer Maurice Jarre’s Wikipedia page. Although the quote was completely unattributed, manifold news agencies picked it up and published it as fact. It was not until days later that anyone found out it was a hoax, and only until Fitzgerald contacted the news agencies to tell them.

The Guardian newspaper was the sole company to publicly apologize for publishing the completely false information. Other news agencies have either ignored the error, quietly corrected it, or simply blamed Fitzgerald outright. Most deliciously, Wikipedia editors had removed the quote within an hour because it could not be verified.

And news companies wonder why people are losing faith in their product.

Popularity: 37% [?]