I have too much going on in my real life that editing full-time is only going to get in the way. I come on once in awhile (when I'm bored) and edit a couple minor things but nothing major. -Deftonesderrick


This editor is an Apprentice Editor and is entitled to display this Service Badge.

Hello, everyone! I've been using Wikipedia for years and started contributing to editing in early 2009. I created this username in late 2009 to establish myself as a legitimate user in the Wiki-community. I typically contribute anywhere from 10-50 edits a week.

I contribute mostly to plot summaries of video games, movies, television show seasons, and books. As an avid editor, I also do my best to watch for vandalism and misinformation and excise it as quickly as possible. My goal is to use my knowledge to help improve pages, especially their plot sections. Whether or not my changes are accepted, if it eventually leads to improvements, then I feel I've contributed.

My Contributions

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Contributions (Listed)

Every page I contribute to, no matter how minor, I stay around and help revert vandalism!

Other Projects I've Created

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Userboxes

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Userboxes I've created

Barnstars

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I can help anyone who wants to create a Barnstar. I have Adobe CS4 and other tools if you don't. Navigate your way to my talk page if you're interested!

Metal Music Barnstar

Wiki Books

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Pixar: A Wiki History

Talk Page Templates

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Talk Page Templates

Editing Tools

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This section is more for me than you (for ease of editing away from my personal computer)

Tip of the day...
 
Digital audio support

Wikipedia uses the Ogg Vorbis, FLAC and WAV formats for audio, as they are not encumbered by patents (an issue that prompted the decision that MP3 files will not be hosted at Wikipedia). Software supporting Vorbis exists for many platforms...

Mozilla Firefox 4, Opera 10.5 and Google Chrome 3 (and later versions) each include their own support for Ogg Vorbis files.

As for multimedia players, Winamp can be used to play Ogg Vorbis files. Although iTunes does not natively support Vorbis, Xiph.Org provides a QuickTime component which can be used in players that rely on QuickTime, such as iTunes, on both Microsoft Windows and Mac OS. DirectShow filters exist to decode Vorbis in multimedia players like Windows Media Player and others which support DirectShow.

Various online tools (such as Zamzar) are available which let you freely convert one file format into another, and can be useful when you want to upload a file to Wikipedia.

To add this auto-updating template to your user page, use
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