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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

User:Rusalkii


I bounce around projects a lot - some projects I've stuck with for longer than most include AfC reviewing, recent change patrolling (great commute timekiller with User:Awesome Aasim/rcpatrol), new page patrol (mostly redirects), typo_team/moss, adding short descriptions and sometimes even writing articles. Lately I've been working a lot on dog breed articles. You can see my AfC log, deletion stats (XfD stats, CSD log) and NPP log at the linked pages.

If I get something wrong or there's a problem with one of my edits, please let me know! And feel free to ping me again or drop a note on my talk page if I haven't replied to something for more than two days. My memory is short and there's a lot of things on- and off-wiki competing for my attention. I do tend to alternate bursts of activities with long breaks, so I might be unavailable.

If I reviewed your AfC draft

AfC submissions
Random submission
~6 weeks
973 pending submissions
Purge to update

If you have any questions about my review of your Articles for Creation draft, feel free to leave me a message. However, you may get a faster response asking another editor or leaving a message at the AfC help desk, since I'm not always very active. You may also want to take a look at User:Rusalkii/AfC source guidance, which is meant to address common issues with AfC drafts. Please do not email me unless the problem can't be discussed publicly.

Note that to be fair to all submitters I do not review or re-review drafts on request. We usually have a long backlog and it may take a long time to get to your draft: please be patient, all reviewers are doing this for free in their spare time.

Did you know...

  • that the Princess of Xiaohe, a 3,800-year-old mummy, was so well preserved that her eyelashes are still intact?
  • that the southernmost worm species, Scottnema lindsayae, reproduces best at temperatures below 10 °C (50 °F)?
  • that Pulaski's Masterpiece, billed as the "world's most valuable dog", disappeared without a trace in 1953?
  • that while reviewers generally praised The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs, one reviewer complained that the author was "so nice about his colleagues that it makes you long for a juicy academic vendetta"?

Things to do

Backlog: Wikipedia conflict of interest edit requests
Goal: 0 requests
Current: 24 requests
Initial: 188 requests
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