Extension:Media Viewer/About/it



Media Viewer mira a migliorare l'esperienza visiva di lettori ed editori occasionali sui siti Wikipedia e Wikimedia.

Questo nuovo browser multimediale mostra le immagini in una dimensione maggiore, con utili informazioni relative a contenuti, autori e metadati. Offre anche un certo numero di funzionalità per ingrandire, condividere, scaricare o incorporare i file multimediali, come descritto sotto.

Scopri di più su Media Viewer in questa pagina di aiuto. Le opinioni sono ben accette in questa discussione.

Perché Media Viewer?
Media Viewer mira a:


 * migliorare l'esperienza visiva per i lettori
 * rendere più facile vedere in anteprima le immagini e navigare tra di esse
 * fornire un rapido riassunto, con un facile accesso ai dettagli
 * offrire altre funzionalità, come ingrandire, scaricare condividere e incorporare

Media Viewer è stato realizzato per i lettori e gli editori casuali, gli utenti principali per questo strumento. Nel corso del tempo queste funzionalità possono incoraggiarli a contribuire maggiormente a Wikipedia e ai progetti fratelli Wikimedia.

Come funziona Media Viewer?


Per aprire un'immagine in Media Viewer, clicca sulla sua miniatura in un qualsiasi articolo, galleria o pagina di categoria. In questo modo verrà mostrata un'immagine più grande in Media Viewer, direttamente sopra alla pagina in cui hai cliccato.

Media Viewer offre un certo numero di utili funzionalità:
 * leggi la didascalia o la descrizione dell'immagine
 * naviga tra immagini collegate
 * ingrandisci l'immagine
 * visualizza l'immagine a schermo intero
 * ottieni ulteriori informazioni sull'autore, la fonte o la licenza
 * ottieni ulteriori dettagli o modifica le informazioni sulla pagina del file
 * condividi, incorpora o scarica un'immagine
 * chiudi Media Viewer
 * disattiva (o attiva) Media Viewer

These features are available every time you click on a thumbnail to open Media Viewer, as long as the tool is enabled. Media Viewer is now enabled by default on all Wikimedia sites, but can be disabled by any user, as described below. From a file description page, click on "Open in Media Viewer" below the image to view it with this tool.

To learn more, read this help file.

How can I turn off this feature?


To disable Media Viewer, click on the 'cogs' icon at the top right corner of Media Viewer (see screenshot). Then click on "Disable Media Viewer." From now on, images will no longer open in Media Viewer: clicking on thumbnails will take you to the file description page on Wikimedia Commons or other file repository.

This Disable feature works for registered users (using a site preference), as well as unregistered or 'anonymous' users (using a file stored locally on your computer). Note that this Disable feature only works on the site where you activate it: disabling Media Viewer on Wikimedia Commons will not disable it on your home Wikipedia or other sister projects.

If you are a registered user, you can also disable Media Viewer in your "Preferences": select the "Appearance" section, and uncheck this option under "Files":  '[  ] ’. Once you click "Save", images will no longer open in Media Viewer for your account on that site.

Note that you can also bypass Media Viewer anytime, without disabling the tool. To quickly access the file description page, simply press one of these keys when clicking on a thumbnail:
 * shift-click: open the file page in a new window
 * command-click: open the file page in a new tab
 * control-click: show a menu of options

How can I re-enable this feature?
If you change your mind and wish to re-enable Media Viewer, visit any file description page on the site where you wish to use this tool. Then click on the 'cogs' icon next to the "Open in Media Viewer" button below that image: this will open it in Media Viewer, with the Enable panel open (see screenshot). Now click on "Enable Media Viewer". This Enable feature works for registered users (using a site preference), as well as unregistered or 'anonymous' users (using a file stored locally on your computer).

Note that this Enable feature only works on the site where you activate it: enabling Media Viewer on Wikimedia Commons will not enable it on your home Wikipedia or other sister projects.

How can I report an issue?
If you find a technical issue, please file a bug here on Phabricator.

You can also post your report on this discussion page, with a screenshot and information on your browser and operating system :).

Before reporting a bug, check first that this issue is not already on this list of known bugs. In case it’s already been fixed, you may also want to test it on this test page on MediaWiki.org -- where new features are released a week before the rest of the wikis.

Note: Media Viewer only supports the most widely used image file formats on Wikimedia sites (e.g.: JPEG, GIF, PNG, TIFF, SVG). In future releases, we plan to add support for more file formats, such as PDF, audio and video files.

More Info
For more information about Media Viewer, visit the product overview page on MediaWiki.org.

Media Viewer was developed by the Wikimedia Foundation's multimedia team from July 2013 to November 2014. It was designed in collaboration with community members, in a series of discussions held over video conferences, IRC, and face-to-face meetings. This tool was then developed and tested as a Beta Feature through April 2014, when it was gradually released worldwide, over a three-month period.

Media Viewer was tested extensively with millions of readers and casual editors, the primary target users for this tool. User feedback was collected through usability studies, community consultations and online surveys. Based on this feedback, a wide range of improvements were developed to make Media Viewer easier to use, such as: an easier way to enlarge images, image captions, and an easier way to disable the tool for personal use.

Many thanks to all the community and team members who contributed to this project. Special acknowledgements to the project team: Fabrice Florin, Gilles Dubuc, Mark Holmquist, Gergő Tisza, Pau Giner, Keegan Peterzell, Rob Lanphier, Howie Fung and Erik Moeller, to name but a few.

To learn more about other multimedia projects, visit this Multimedia project hub.