Communication/en

There are several ways to get in contact with other MediaWiki users and developers, or to follow Wikimedia and MediaWiki related news.

For help with the MediaWiki software
There are a few forums around the internet where you can get help both with using MediaWiki and with setting up MediaWiki.


 * Project:Support desk
 * Wikimedia Developer Support (Discourse)
 * MediaWiki Users forum (Unofficial)
 * StackExchange's #mediawiki tag (RSS feed) (Unofficial)
 * Reddit's MediaWiki group (Unofficial)

Basics
These are good first steps:


 * Register your user account and set up your public user page.
 * Make sure you have an email address confirmed and email notifications enabled in your mediawiki.org preferences.
 * "Watch" (click the star icon of) the pages you want to follow and perhaps contribute to.
 * Check the FAQ, the help, the manual, or other documentation.

Chat
on irc.freenode.net is the around-the-clock for user questions. For technical questions about MediaWiki, use.


 * State your problem immediately and wait for a response. Don't ask "is there anyone here" or "can someone help me". This is normal IRC etiquette and allows participants to multitask effectively.
 * Expect to wait for some time for an initial response, especially in off-peak times. Despite this, out of courtesy for the volunteer who is helping you, try to answer their questions promptly.

If you don't get an answer, this could mean one of a number of things:

Questions relating to problems with your particular installation of MediaWiki are generally best answered on IRC, since they often require a back-and-forth exchange to isolate the problem, which is tedious when performed on the mailing lists.
 * Nobody was around at the time of day you chose. If the channel is generally quiet, come back later.
 * You're asking a question which nobody knows the answer to, or which requires a lot of work to answer.

Mailing lists
There are several available. The recommended ones are:


 * mediawiki-l (or via Gmane) (or via your newsreader) is the high-traffic mailing list to ask for help with using or setting up MediaWiki.
 * wikitech-l (or via Gmane) (or via your newsreader) is the high-traffic mailing list for both MediaWiki and Wikimedia software development.
 * mediawiki-announce (or via Gmane) (or via your newsreader) is a low-traffic list for announcements of new MediaWiki releases and security updates (all messages also go to mediawiki-l).
 * wikitech-ambassadors Announcements about upcoming changes on Wikimedia websites. This list is primarily aimed at end users of Wikimedia wikis, not the MediaWiki software in general.

Please check the archives first! All three lists are also available through Gmane which provides access as newsgroups or in various web-based formats, and includes its own archives and archive search.

Social Media
Follow the MediaWiki accounts:


 * @MediaWiki (Twitter)
 * MediaWiki (Facebook)

More details at. 

Blog

 * The Wikimedia Tech Blog is a venue to share stories from Wikimedia's technical community across and beyond Wikimedia-tech. See the editorial guidelines for more information.
 * There are some tech blogs hosted on Phabricator.
 * The English Wikimedia planet blog aggregator sometimes contains tech stuff mixed in with posts mostly about non-technical aspects of Wikimedia projects.

Newsletter

 * Wikimedia's Tech/News covers all the technical activity happening across the Wikimedia movement.
 * There are further newsletters that you can subscribe to.

Groups

 * There are several MediaWiki Groups which could match your location or interests.
 * The aims to advocate the needs of MediaWiki users.

Websites

 * Wikimedia's Meta-Wiki was formerly where documents were managed and proposals were discussed before this site was started. There is still a lot of content there that has yet to be moved.
 *  is where feature requests and bugs may be reported or browsed.
 * Translatewiki is a MediaWiki site that allows collaborative translation, including of MediaWiki software.