User blog comment:P進大好きbot/Analysis of 非想非非想 notation/@comment-39541634-20190827132021/@comment-39541634-20190828113219

I fully agree that this wiki is in far worse shape than its Japanese cousin. But this isn't due to the lack of quality non-Japanese googologists. It's mostly due to the fact that the langauage barrier protects your wiki from most casual trolls and other juvenile troublemakers. It's far easier to maintain a quality wiki when only 2% of the world are capable of reading and writing there.

I also fully agree with you that the Japanese googology community as a whole has no international counterpart. This wiki, most certainly, isn't it. There's also a forum to which many of the pros left after the big trolling incidents here, but I can't really recommend that one either. Let's just say that after everything I've been through on this wiki, I still prefer it here over their place. And I sure can't imagine them holding an event of the kind you've mentioned. They are too uptight and snobby for that.

At any rate, my point is that the lack of an organized international community does not mean that there isn't an international readership for your serious work. There are many mathematicians and math-oriented people in the world. Many of them, like myself, are no doubt interested in the topic of large numbers. Just because they don't actively participate here (honestly, I don't blame them) doesn't mean they don't exist. You can bet that many of them read the blog posts here regularly.

I also think that you underestimate the level of interest that the rookies here would display to a quality post that includes a definition. Just because they're not yet ready to implement such formality themselves, does not mean that they won't be interested in seeing an expert do it.