Community Tech

Community Tech

Community Tech manages the Community Wishlist, a forum for contributors from all Wikimedia projects to suggest and comment on product and technology changes and improvements.

We leverage the Wishlist to collaborate with editors, volunteer developers, and other Wikimedia teams to turn community-identified needs into real solutions, and work on priority wishes.

The team

Mike Eztuinaga

Lead Technical Program Manager

Karolin Siebert

Engineering Manager

Cormac Parle

Principal Software Engineer

Dayllan Maza

Staff Software Engineer, Tech Lead

Tim Starling

Principal Software Architect

Joydeep Sengupta

Principal User Experience Designer

Harumi Monroy

Senior Software Engineer

MusikAnimal

Staff Software Engineer

Sam Wilson

Staff Software Engineer

Sammy Fox

Software Engineer

Dom Walden

Test Engineer

George Mikesell

Test Engineer

Luca Martinelli [Sannita]

Movement Communications Specialist

Ruth O'Donoghue

Senior UX Designer

🛠️ How We Work

We are a small team with limited resources, and balance our efforts across three categories:

  • Building tooling to advance the Community Wishlist
  • Maintenance of existing tools and features supported by the Community Tech team
  • Delivering on wishes, primarily by adopting Focus Areas supported by volunteers.

When we say "no" to a given request, we are merely stating it goes against our current priorities.

When working and communicating with us:

  • Please be calm, civil, and assume we’re working in good faith.
  • We aim to respond promptly but can't guarantee immediate replies.
  • Sometimes, we may need to close a conversation if it takes too much of our time or attention.
  • We can not handle projects on another team's roadmap or ones that conflict with their work, but we will direct you to the right person when possible.
  • We can not discuss staffing or confidential issues.

Current selected projects

Community Tech is currently wrapping up carry-over work from the 2023 Wishlist. Beginning in 2024-25, the team will adopt community-supported Focus Areas via the new Community Wishlist.

Projects Project status
Multiple Watchlists
  In development
Support full colour 3D models on Wikimedia projects
  In development
Make the Chart extension beginner-friendly
  In development

📢 Latest Updates

April 7, 2026: What we have done so far and what the team will be working on in the next months

Hello everyone! This time, we have a lot of news to share regarding the work done so far, and what’s coming next. This will also be the format going forward to provide more visibility into work.

The work we did in the last month

First of all, we are wrapping up work on Watchlist labels on all projects. This new feature allows users to add labels to items in their watchlist to help with managing and filtering watchlists, especially large ones. So far, 1,595 users across projects have created at least one label, and 3,554 labels have been created, for a total of 250,279 watchlist pages that have been assigned a label. We are happy about these initial results, and we expect these statistics to grow with time.

Other smaller wishes that we implemented in the last month are:

What we currently have in progress

We are also wrapping up work to be completed in the next few months, in collaboration with other Wikimedia Foundation teams, on wishes such as:

What we are scoping next

Looking ahead, we already identified our priorities for the months to come, and it is a lot of work! Here’s a sneak peak at some of the work we defined as our next priorities:

We will also keep on our table the Support full colour 3D models on Wikimedia projects, a very popular wish among those submitted with 37 supporters. The team has already started working on it and is resolving new productionalization dependencies now. We also are continuing to evaluate and plan on how to scope and decompose Make the Chart extension beginner-friendly, since this is another well-supported wish (see discussion page to add feedback).

Meanwhile, we are working closely with other teams to solve other wishes, such as:

Some statistics

We also wanted to share some statistics with you regarding the current situation of wishes:

  • so far, we closed 44 wishes as fulfilled (8% of the total of wishes);
  • we have 17 wishes in progress and we have prioritized another 15 (meaning we will start working on them soon), totaling 7% of wishes;
  • 204 wishes are categorized as long-term opportunities, but we commit to continually revisit these to determine whether some could become actionable in the near future;
  • 78 wishes are considered community responses and we invite community to look at this to solve them;
  • 79 wishes were closed due to duplication, alignment with community guidelines rather than technical issues, or lack of feasibility;
  • lastly, another 87 are still under review by our various Foundation teams.

These numbers are regularly shifting due to new incoming wishes. For the past two months, we have also been responding to wishes consistently within a week of submission.

We need your feedback

To provide more transparency about how we triage and prioritize wishes, we want to also update our guidelines with tips on how to write a good wish. Please, join the discussion and have your say.

As always, if you have questions or feedback about it, please let us know in the Community Wishlist’s talk page. We are eager to hear from you!

Previous updates

Further information

Category:Community Tech Category:Engineering and Product department Category:Maintained by the Wikimedia Foundation
Category:Community Tech Category:Engineering and Product department Category:Maintained by the Wikimedia Foundation