Universal Language Selector/Design/Interlanguage links

With the current list of interlanguage links, users have to process a long list of languages looking for their languages of interest time after time. We can make the language list shorter by including only the languages which are relevant to the user.

As multilingual content grows, interlanguage links become longer on Wikipedia articles. Articles such as "Barak Obama" or "Sun" have more than 200 links, and that becomes a problem for users that often switch among several languages. The Universal Language Selector can be used in this context to:


 * Show only a short list of the relevant languages for the user based on geo-IP, previous choices and browser settings of the current user. The language the users are looking for will be there most of the times.
 * Include a "more" option to access the rest of the languages for which the content exists with an indicator of the number of languages.
 * Provide a list of the rest of the languages that users can easily scan (grouped by script and region so that alphabetical ordering is possible), and search (allowing users to search a language name in another language, using ISO codes or even making typos).

Since interlanguage links are a critical element, and it is hard to anticipate the effects on all kinds of articles, this has been proposed as a beta feature so that users can provide feedback based on actual use on their context. Feel free to volunteer for developing this feature or provide feedback.

Prototype and usability testing

 * Prototype showing the idea.
 * Usability testing recordings. To see how users will switch languages.

Feedback
The idea was shared on the design mailing list. These are the suggestions and concerns from our community:

Suggestions

 * Take into account the article size/quality. A featured/good article should be more biased to appear on the sidebar and/or the top of the list.
 * Seems there is a need for this, illustrated by:
 * There is a user script that does a primitive version of this.
 * There is also an Opera extension.
 * Each wiki site has different ordering requirements - like Hebrew and Hungarian wikis want English as the first link, or 'nn' uses 'no','sv','da' before all others.
 * All this can (and should) be done in javascript, without affecting servers.
 * Consider accessibility issues.
 * In the worst case, if the solution is JS-only, a user with JS disabled will be in the current situation (full list of links).
 * The list of languages shown by default should probably be more "generous" than with the ULS standard:
 * All the (main) languages of the same *family* should be shown in it.
 * Include minor languages from the user region (GeoIP), and minor languages associated to another major language related to the user (e.g., include Breton if we know French has been previously selected or is in the Browser configuration).

Concerns

 * Advertising the many languages of Wikipedia is a strongly-held value of many Wikimedians.
 * Options suggested: emphasise by ordering instead of hiding the rest, or do it just for logged-in users.
 * The use of Geo-IP may be interpreted as trying to enforce certain languages in certain geographic areas, which would be contrary to the mission of the Wikimedia Foundation.
 * This may tend to reinforce the dominance of major languages on the net.
 * Cluter can be an effective way to hide or obstruct the access to information. If suggestions include minnor languages, this can bring more visibility to them than the usual list.
 * GeoIP solution rely on good information.
 * GeoIP is not perfect, but that is not used as the main information source just as a fallback for more reliable sources such as previous selections or browser language.

Technical information

 * Universal Language Selector. Extension that provides already most of the needed pieces (language selection list, cross-language search, and identification of likely languages).