Wikipedia:Peer review/Nikola Tesla/archive1

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Nikola Tesla[edit]

This peer review discussion has been closed.
I've listed this article for peer review because it's a top importance article, and I would like to list it here first before putting listing it as a good article nominee.

Thanks, Albacore (talk) 19:40, 7 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Since your goal at this point is GA, I reviewed the article primarily with the GA criteria in mind. The article is generally well-written and quite a few editors have contributed to it. But there are a number of issues and there is some more work required before it is up to the GA standard. Here are some comments I hope will be helpful:

  • More than a few of the issues raised at Talk:Nikola Tesla/GA1 when the article was delisted remain unaddressed. All of the issues raised there should be fixed. For example:
    • There are still a couple of dead links.

 Done, dead links removed.

    • Author names in the references are still inconsistent.
    • ISBNs have not yet been provided.
    • There are several direct quotations that are not referenced.
  • Images should be relevant to the section in which they appear. Many of the images seem out of place where they appear in the article. There should not by any images in the Further reading section.

 Done Removed image from Further reading section, re-arranged some images to different sections.

  • Images should also not force the sandwiching of the text or other strange formatting. Many of them do. Some of them will probably have to be deleted to allow the article to format correctly.
  • There are quite a few copyright problems with the images. Most of them are probably public domain, but the claims and/or sourcing are not clear. Unless corrected, the problematic images should be deleted. The issues I found are:

 Done, changed to PD-US-patent only.

 Done changed to Non-free 3D image with a fair use rationale.

 Done, tagged both for deletion.

  • There is still some overlinking. Common terms like horse-riding, investors, and the like should not be linked.

 Done, delinked some common terms

  • Underlinking: Lord Kelvin, liquefaction, X-rays, Roentgen rays, and similar terms should be linked.

 Done, linked

  • The list of devices and principles belongs in a list article, not in the article body. It should be moved and linked to in the See also section.
  • Many sections are still undersourced. There are whole paragraphs without a single citation. One citation per paragraphs is a good rule of thumb. Extraordinary claims like his language fluency, mysophobia, and the death of the pigeon (for examples) must be sourced. All of the claims in the Legacy and honors sections should be sourced.
  • The external links are excessive. See WP:EL for guidance.
  • There are multiple source issues. I did not check exhaustively, but a spot check reveals these issues:
    • 13 does not link to the PDF

 Done, now links to PDF.

    • 16 does not contain the information cited

 Done, now contains the information cited.

    • 21 does not link to the source information. Regardless, page numbers need to be provided for the many claims sources to this book.
    • Teslasociety.com, www.tesla.hu, keyrr.net and www.cyberspaceorbit.net are not reliable sources

 Done, unreliable references removed.

    • 93 does not link to the source.

I hope these comments are helpful and appreciate all the work that has gone into the article thus far. --Nasty Housecat (talk) 03:46, 12 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I can't say I'm an expert in the field, but I feel I have a reasonable enough armchair understanding of the topic. This sentence in the lead seems highly suspect and I can't see any support for these claims in the body:

"In addition to his work on electromagnetism and electromechanical engineering, Tesla contributed in varying degrees to the establishment of robotics, remote control, radar, and computer science, and to the expansion of ballistics, nuclear physics, and theoretical physics."

Tesla was a gifted inventor and extremely hard worker, but I have to question his ability to contribute to nuclear physics for one. The body of the article doesn't go into this at all, nor does it mention ballistics, computer science, robotics (mentioned, but apparently incorrectly) or theoretical physics. Several of these claims seem to be found on this website, although that might just be copying something else (even this article). And having written the majority of the History of radar article, the claim to priority here is essentially groundless and only leave it in to avoid edit wars. Without real support, these claims need to be removed. Maury Markowitz (talk) 02:38, 26 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I take it back, the radar article has been so expanded my contribution is now a tiny minority of the body. Maury Markowitz (talk) 02:44, 26 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]