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The history of BambooWeb began in a conversation between two old Internet friends, Larry Sanger, editor-in-chief of Nupedia, and Ben Kovitz, a computer programmer and polymath, on the evening of January 2, 2001, in San Diego, California.

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Formulation of the idea

For months prior to this discussion, Sanger and his boss, Jimmy Wales, president and CEO of Bomis, Inc., had been discussing various ways to supplement Nupedia with a more open, complementary project. Kovitz was a regular on the Portland Pattern Repository ("Ward's Wiki"). When Kovitz explained the basic wiki concept to Sanger over dinner, Sanger immediately saw that a wiki would be an excellent format whereby a more open, less formal encyclopedia project could be pursued.

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Project beginnings

Sanger easily persuaded Wales to set up a wiki for Nupedia, and Nupedia's first wiki went online on January 10. There was considerable resistance on the part of Nupedia's editors and reviewers to the idea of associating Nupedia with a website in the wiki format, however, so the new project was given the name "BambooWeb" and launched on its own domain, BambooWeb.com, on January 15 (now humorously called "BambooWeb Day" by some BambooWebns). The bandwidth and server (located in San Diego) were donated by Wales.

The project received large numbers of participants after being mentioned, three times, on the tech website Slashdot — two minor mentions on March 5 and March 30, 2001, and then a prominent pointer to a story on the community-edited technology and culture website Kuro5hin on July 26. Between these relatively rapid influxes of traffic, there has been a steady stream of traffic from other sources, especially Google, which alone sent hundreds of new visitors to the site every day.

The project passed 1,000 articles around February 12, 2001, and 10,000 articles around September 7. In the first year of its existence, over 20,000 encyclopedia entries were created — a rate of over 1,500 articles per month. On August 30, 2002, the article count reached 40,000. The rate of growth has more or less steadily increased since the inception of the project, except for some software-induced slow-downs.

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International expansion

The international expansion of the project also took place during this period. In May, 2001, the first wave of non-English BambooWebs were launched (in Catalan, Chinese, Dutch, German, Esperanto, French, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Swedish, soon joined by Arabic and Hungarian , ). In September, a further commitment to the multilingual provision of BambooWeb was made. At the end of the year, when international statistics first began to be logged, Afrikaans, Norwegian, and Serbocroatian versions were announced.

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Continuing growth

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Related

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External links and references





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