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I am of course familiar with the UCL, but looking at the page title I didn't really realize what it was until after I thought about it a little. I also added the page to Category:Lists of people by university affiliation, where it is not at all obvious where any particular institution is located. Many of these abbreviations are less familiar outside a given context. Here the context is global, and with all the californian universities having similar abbreviations, I think it is clearer with the whole name. I made a category for UCL, as well: Category:University College London. You can probably think of more articles to add to it.
I would also advice you to move the list one step further to List of University College London people, in order to be able to include noteworthy non-alumni teachers at UCL in the same list. If the list gets really long, you may consider dividing it, but most other universities have only one list for people (Berkeley has three but they should probably be merged). Personally, I also prefer when these lists are annotated, rather than just linked names. You can look at the List of Uppsala University people (which I have been working on from time to time) for one way of doing it. (BTW, the MIT list is at List of Massachusetts Institute of Technology people, MIT people is just a redirect.) / up+land 13:16, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC)
PS. I just noticed that you already moved it to the "...people" title. / up+land 13:17, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC)
(Posted the above on the user page first by mistake, moving it here now. / up+land 13:19, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC))
Thanks for the detailed reply -- I've replied on your talk page. If you do see this though, thanks also for List of Uppsala University people, its wonderful! --stochata 13:28, 24 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Re: Transportation network page
Latest comment: 25 July 20052 comments1 person in discussion
My apologies, as I do not quite know the etiquette on replying to messages; do I post it here in your talk page, or in mine?
In any case, I really like the changes you've suggested, and as you came up with them, I'll leave it to you to apply them. I kept looking for something like that to say but couldn't come up with it. I'm a bit wordy at times.
Only thing is I think another user commented that the British English thing was important. I could be wrong about this, I haven't gone back to look. But there was some concern that "transportation" was strictly American and "transport" strictly British. No British mathematicians came forward to tell whether this was the case in graph theory as well.
Perhaps the best solution would be for us to relegate such discussions to the discussion page of the article in question, so that other people don't have to go over the same thing later. Good day to you, sir. --aciel16:36, 25 July 2005 (UTC)Reply
An interesting number
Latest comment: 18 August 20051 comment1 person in discussion
Latest comment: 2 January 20061 comment1 person in discussion
Hi, I do have some material on Centrality measures and Graph analysis, and would be glad to share them with you.
Regards, Somesh21:37, 2 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Math COTW
Latest comment: 14 January 20061 comment1 person in discussion