翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Everything's OK (album)
・ Everything's on Fire
・ Everything's on Ice
・ Everything's Relative
・ Everything's Relative (1987 TV series)
・ Everything's Relative (1999 TV series)
・ Everything's Rosie
・ Everything's Rosie (TV series)
・ Everything's Ruined
・ Everything's the Rush
・ Everything's Tuesday
・ Everything, Everyday, Everywhere
・ Everything, Everything
・ Everything, Now!
・ Everything. Now!
Everything2
・ EverythingCU.com
・ Everytime
・ Everytime (Butterfingers song)
・ Everytime (Tatyana Ali song)
・ Everytime I Cry
・ Everytime I Die (disambiguation)
・ Everytime I See You
・ Everytime I Think about Her
・ Everytime It Rains
・ Everytime tha Beat Drop
・ Everytime We Touch
・ Everytime We Touch (album)
・ Everytime We Touch (Cascada song)
・ Everytime We Touch (David Guetta song)


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Everything2 : ウィキペディア英語版
Everything2

Everything2 (styled Everything2), or E2 for short, is a collaborative Web-based community consisting of a database of interlinked user-submitted written material. E2 is moderated for quality, but has no formal policy on subject matter. Writing on E2 covers a wide range of topics and genres, including encyclopedic articles, diary entries (known as "daylogs"), poetry, humor, and fiction.
==History==
The predecessor of E2 was a similar database called Everything (later labeled "Everything1" or "E1") which was started around March 1998 by Nathan Oostendorp and was initially closely aligned with and promoted by the technology-related news website Slashdot (by virtue of various key principals having attended the Holland Christian High School), even sharing (at the time) some administrators. The E2 software offered vastly more features, and the Everything1 data was twice incorporated into E2: once on November 13, 1999, and again in January 2000.
The Everything2 server used to be colocated with the Slashdot servers. However, some time after OSDN acquired Slashdot, and moved the Slashdot servers, this hosting was terminated on short notice. This resulted in Everything2 being offline from roughly November 6 to December 9, 2003. Everything2 was then hosted by the University of Michigan for a time. As the Everything2 site put it on October 2, 2006:
Now, we have an arrangement with the University of Michigan, located in Ann Arbor. We exist thanks to their generosity (which is motivated by their academic curiosity, I suppose). They gave us some servers and act as our ISP, free of charge, and all they ask in exchange is that we not display advertisements.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Archived E2 FAQ: How come the site goes down so much? )

The Everything2 servers were moved to the nearby Michigan State University in February 2007.
E2 was privately owned by the Blockstackers Intergalactic company, but does not make a profit and is viewed by its long-term users as a collaborative work-in-progress. Until mid-2007 it accepted donations of money and, on occasion, of computer hardware but no longer does so. Some of its administrators are affiliated with Blockstackers, some are not. The site is not a democracy, and the degree to which users influence decisions depends on the nature of the decisions and the administrators making them. As of January 23, 2012, it was announced that the site had been sold to long-time user and coder Jay Bonci under the name Everything2 Media LLC.
Writeups in E1 were limited to 512 bytes in size. This, plus the predominantly "geek" membership back then and the lack of chat facilities, meant the early work was often of poor quality and was filled with self-referential humor. As E2 has expanded, stricter quality standards have developed, much of the old material has been removed, and the membership has become broader in interest, although smaller in number. Many noders prefer to write encyclopedic articles similar to those on Wikipedia (and indeed some actively contribute to both E2 and Wikipedia). Some write fiction or poetry, some discuss issues, and some write daily journals, called "daylogs." Unlike Wikipedia, E2 does not have an enforced neutral point of view. An informal survey of noder political beliefs indicates that the user base tends to lean left politically. There are conservative voices as well, however, and while debate nodes (of any kind, political or not) are rarely tolerated, well-formed points of view from any part of the political or cultural spectrum are.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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