by Jay Hathaway on August 20, 2009 at 06:30 PM

The good news is that Wikipedia finally has an official iPhone app. The bad news is that Wikipedia already had an iPhone-optimized website, and the app doesn't offer any compelling reason why you shouldn't just keep using that. Unlike some of the downloadable, offline-readable versions of Wikipedia we've covered before, the iPhone app isn't any more useful than a bookmark of the mobile site. ...
by Christina Warren on June 19, 2009 at 05:00 PM
![Wikipedia to get better video support]()
Fortunately, Wikipedia's video options won't end up like this
When I first read the headline that Wikipedia, the popular online encyclopedia, is preparing to offer editors lots of new video tools and support, I was immediately filled with dread. I instantly started imagining the types of videos that overly pedantic Wikipedia editors would create, on such scintillating topics like the "Mary Sue" ...
by Jay Hathaway on June 12, 2009 at 04:00 PM

Google's automated translation service, Google Translate, is one of the most popular language tools on the web, but Google has other ambitions in the translation field. The recently-launched Translator Toolkit is aimed at helping people create better translations of web pages, Wikipedia articles and Google Knol articles. These improved translations feed back into Google Translate, making it more ...
by Brad Linder on March 31, 2009 at 01:30 PM

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales has announced plans to kill off the Wikia Search project. Wikia Search was built to be sort of the Wikipedia of search engines. While a computer generates initial search results, users can adjust the order of results and even alter descriptions. When I checked out Wikia Search last summer I was actually pretty impressed with its feature set. And then I forgot about ...
by Jay Hathaway on February 27, 2009 at 11:00 AM

Wikipedia is one of the most-visited sites on the Internet, for very good reason. If you're like me, and Wikipedia is your starting point for research on any topic -- and your starting and stopping point for quick facts -- then you might be interested in a handful of ways to make your Wikipedia experience faster, more attractive or more integrated. Give Wikipedia a boost with these great apps ...
by Lee Mathews on February 17, 2009 at 01:00 PM

Wikipedia is a great resource, but the layout is a bit much if you're only there to do a little reading and learn some things that might, in reality, be actual facts. As is the case with most big-name sites, a userscript is available that cleans up the cluttered default layout and makes Wikipedia items look more like pages from a printed encyclopdeia.
Load an article, then install Simplepedia and ...
by Christina Warren on October 23, 2008 at 02:00 PM

If you had asked me yesterday if I thought I would get any use out of the WikiMobile Encyclopedia for Android, I probably would have rudely laughed in your face. The joke is on me, because WikiMobile is actually a pretty fantastic. It's also free -- something that cannot be said for the $19.99 BlackBerry version (and I'm not paying $19.99 to access a free website on my Curve). Bonfire Media really ...
by Victor Agreda, Jr. on September 2, 2008 at 01:15 PM

Yesterday might have been a US holiday, but the Twittering and blogging masses were awakened (by quacking claxons, I'm sure) to the inadvertent leak of Google Chrome, the oft-rumored browser from the search giant. Naturally, everyone wants a piece of the action. Here are a few of the stories we're digesting: TechCrunch has some juicy first pics of the browser. They snagged a few blurry YouTube ...
by Jay Hathaway on August 12, 2008 at 10:00 AM

Wikipedia is a great source of information, and it's getting bigger every day. If you're like me, you'd be hard pressed to go a day without looking something up on Wikipedia. But sometimes you might not have Internet access -- devastating, I know! -- and you still need to know whether there's a grammatically correct sentence made up entirely of the word "buffalo." Well, it's a good thing there's ...
by Lee Mathews on August 5, 2008 at 02:00 PM

Because copying and pasting is just too much effort sometimes, the fine developers of Kallout have been kind enough to create a tool that improves the ease and convenience of performing searches. Download the 3.2mb installer (Windows Vista and XP only), and Kallout will nestle itself into your system tray and go to work. To activate it, just highlight some text in any program and Kallout's blue ...
by Brad Linder on July 23, 2008 at 02:30 PM

Google has finally pulled back the curtain on its so-called Wikipedia killer, Google Knol. We first heard that Google was looking at launching a user-editable encyclopedia-style web services late last year. But to be perfectly honest, a lot's happened in the last 7 months and we kind of forgot about it. Now that it's here, we're not entirely sure it's fair to call it a Wikipedia-killer. Knol ...
by Lee Mathews on June 30, 2008 at 05:00 PM

Sure, Wikipedia may be one of the best places on the internet to find information on just about anything in a hurry, but what about when you're stuck in an elevator during a blackout and you can't remember who wrote The Republic? Relax! Pocket Wikipedia provides quick access to important articles offline - and on just about any kind of device. The download includes about 24,000 images and over 14 ...
by Brad Linder on June 4, 2008 at 05:00 PM

Ever wonder how many clicks it takes to get from the Wikipedia page for Bill Gates to the page for Mark Shuttleworth? The answer is three. How about from "ice cream" to "cone?" Surprisingly, the answer is four. We know this not because we've been wasting hours clicking on every possible Wikipedia link and tabulating the results, but because somebody's done all the hard work for us by creating a ...
by Brad Linder on June 3, 2008 at 11:00 AM

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales has relaunched Wikia Search. And this time, the site actually might be worth using. When Wales announced that he was working on a human powered search engine to compliment his human powered encyclopedia, we were skeptical but curious. When the public alpha launched earlier this year, we were disappointed. Up until this week, Wikia Search was basically just like any ...
by Romeo Wahed on May 13, 2008 at 11:30 PM

Welcome to Googleholic, your bi-weekly fix of everything Google! In this edition:
Search for real estate on Google Maps
Faces getting blurred in Street View
Gmail gets slight loading speed boost
Wikipedia comes to Google Maps
...