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User:Universe=atom

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Quick count of pages in Wikipedia that I have created: 25 pages + 2 templates (click anywhere here to see the complete list).

I have raised the article Saturn to Featured Status with only a couple of weeks of work.

This user participates in the
Solar System task force.
Indian WikipedianThis user is an Indian Wikipedian.


This user is a member of the
Counter-Vandalism Unit.
WikipediaThis user helps make Simple English Wikipedia better.
The No Smoking sign This user is against smoking.
This user supports recycling.
The time is currently 04:21:49 UTC.
An AK-47. Interesting...

Etymology

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Signature: Universe=atomTalkContributions 14:43, 18 June 2007 (UTC)

My user name means that each and individual atom is part of the universe, and if even one atom is destroyed (which, by the way, is impossible, according to the Law of Conservation of Matter and Energy), the universe will not be a complete universe anymore. This also proves that each person is important, especially on Wikipedia, where each and every user is supposed to be given equal emphasis as any other user, whether he may be a plain IP address or an influential administrator.

Types of Contributions

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Mostly the following:

Goal

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To edit and improve (perhaps even to Featured Article statues) the following types of articles:

  • India-related articles
  • Country articles (*my specialty*)
  • Planet articles (my personal favo[u]rites)
  • Any Featured Article (often shortened to FA)
  • Any others that I find needing help

Articles That I Have Edited

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I have edited SEVERAL articles! See here for my contribution list.

Articles/templates That I Have CREATED

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Ask Me For Help If You See Any Country Articles Needing Help

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Yes, please do so! I will be there immediately and will edit it to make it better. After all, COUNTRY ARTICLES ARE MY SPECIALTY!

Vote:

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Today's Featured Article and Did You Know

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Today's featured article

GL Mk. II transmitter van
GL Mk. II transmitter van

Radar, Gun Laying, Mark I, or GL Mk. I for short, was an early World War II radar system developed by the British Army to provide information for anti-aircraft artillery. There were two upgrades, GL/EF (elevation finder) and GL Mk. II (pictured), both improving the ability to determine a target's bearing and elevation. GL refers to the radar's ability to direct the guns onto a target, known as gun laying. The first GL sets were developed in 1936 using separate transmitters and receivers mounted on gun carriages. Several were captured in 1940, leading the Germans to believe falsely that British radar was much less advanced than theirs. The GL/EF attachment provided bearing and elevation measurements accurate to about a degree: this caused the number of rounds needed to destroy an aircraft to fall to 4,100, a tenfold improvement over early-war results. The Mk. II, which was able to directly guide the guns, lowered the rounds-per-kill to 2,750. About 410 Mk. Is and 1,679 Mk. IIs were produced. (Full article...)

Recently featured:

Did you know...

Lieke Klaver ahead in the women's 400 metres final
Lieke Klaver ahead in the women's 400 metres final

In the news

Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o in 2012
Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o

On this day...

May 30: Statehood Day in Croatia (1990)

Johann Sebastian Bach
Johann Sebastian Bach
More anniversaries:
Ignace Tonené

Ignace Tonené (1840 or 1841 – 15 March 1916), also known as Nias or by his Ojibwe name Maiagizis ('right/correct sun'), was a Teme-Augama Anishnabai chief, fur trader, and gold prospector in Upper Canada. He was a prominent employee of the Hudson's Bay Company. Tonené was the elected deputy chief before being the lead chief and later the life chief of his community. In his role as deputy, he negotiated with the Canadian federal government and the Ontario provincial government, advocating for his community to receive annual financial support from both. His attempts to secure land reserves for his community were thwarted by the Ontario premier Oliver Mowat. Tonené's prospecting triggered a 1906 gold rush and the creation of Kerr Addison Mines Ltd., although one of his claims was stolen from him by white Canadian prospectors. This photograph shows Tonené in 1909.

Photograph credit: William John Winter; restored by Adam Cuerden