I've been an admin for the past year and a bit now, and have poked my head into a lot of the subcommunities that make up /tg/station. Events, admin training, wiki editing, coding, mapping. I've been having a lot of fun watching all of the passion poured into /tg/ that makes all of these pieces come together and supporting them where I can.
What have I done?
- Mapped out the cooking challenge in the most recent gameshow event
- Simplified silicon policy with the help of players and admins contributing in the policy forum
- Categorized issues as an issue manager on Github
- Picked up and revamped parts of the Xenobio wiki page, White Ships page, and Guide to Food/Drinks pages on the wiki
- Redesigned and re-mapped Kilo medbay treatment room
- Contributed QoL features to the codebase including borg model radials and making it so all of our nice new stool sprites face the right ways
I don't have any grand sweeping changes I want to make. What I want to do is improve on what we already have and do all of the boring work that headmins have to do, like handling ban appeals, complaints, and onboarding new admins.
I love digging through logs with other admins, both in-game and after the fact. I find piecing together events to be an interesting challenge. This is a big part of ban appeals and complaints, and it's something I don't intend to shy away from.
Policy Discussions
There have only been a handful of rulings from policy discussions that have made it to the headmin rulings wiki page this term. The rest of them, as far as I know, are all buried in the policy subforum or policybus. For admins who are coming back after a break, new admins, or interested players, it's a lot of work (and a ton of reading!) to keep up with.
I'd like to to keep the headmin rulings page up to date and use discord threads to our advantage in policybus. We would have discussions about specific policies confined to their respective threads, with the main channel being used for final rulings, with links to the forum post that started them and the thread they were discussed in.
Why do I need to be a headmin to change the wiki?
As I learned personally, changing the wiki rules page as a non-headmin is hard! And thus it tends to go largely unmaintained. When I was doing my silicon policy simplification, which I posted initially on December 27th 2020, it took until March 6th 2021 for the changes to make their way to the wiki (one of them didn't make the wiki at all, which was including that corpses are non-human from the headmin rulings page on the "is it human" chart). This was a non-trivial change and there was lots of good discussion which slimmed down and improved the wording in those ~3 months, but it gives an idea of how inaccessible improving the wiki rules can be to non-headmins.
In Summary
I want to do all of the boring things headmins do because they're things I enjoy. Organizing relevant information in easily-digestable ways, listening to the concerns of our admins and players, and getting excited with them for their victories.
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