Sunday, October 28, 2007

Top 20 Unconventional ways to use Wikipedia

-By James Yeang






Started only in 2001, Wikipedia has grown to become the single most comprehensive information ever created.  As of now, there are more than 75,000 active contributors working on some 5,300,000 articles in more than 100 languages.



It has earned the distinction of being the 9th most popular site in the world according to Alexa, and has become so pervasive in our lives that scientists are even using it to help computers think smarter.


Here is the first installment of 20 creative ways to use Wikipedia


1. Read Wikipedia as a comic book


comics


Bored of reading conventional articles?  Greg Williams picks Wikipedia articles and ?converts? them into small comic books.  Don’t expect to find a large amount of comic articles here, but be entertained as seemingly boring topics turn into light reading.



2. Navigate Wikipedia as a mindmap


wikipedia


Presented in a visual form, Wikimindmap helps you browse through related articles and ideas really quickly.  Using mindmaps, you can get a structured view of any topic available on Wikipedia. 


3. Have Wikipedia as a part of Google Earth


earth


Want to dig deeper about a certain location on Google Earth?  You can now tap into Wikipedia’s vast information resources.  Just download the latest update to Google Earth, then go to Layers -> Geographic Web section in Google Earth and tick the Wikipedia box.



4. Go offline with Wikipedia on DVD


dvd


Useful as an offline reference tool, or for distribution in areas with slow or non-existent Internet access, Choice articles from Wikipedia is available for free download as a DVD, or you can buy it at $13.99.


Articles were chosen based on criteria for quality and importance set by the Wikipedia community. Topics covered include, among others, geography, arts, literature, science, history, and natural sciences. Users can browse articles using a built-in search engine or by surfing navigational pages.



5. Search Wikipedia and Google at the same time


googlepedia


This awesome Firefox extension shows you a relevant Wikipedia article along with your search results.  To top it off, clicking links in the wikipedia article will trigger new Google searches, making it a very useful research tool indeed.



6. Stumble Through the Wikipedia articles which are fine tuned to your taste


stumble


StumbleUpon has got to be the easiest way to rate websites and discover others which match your tastes.  Clicking one of the links on the StumbleThru page restricts your toolbar and returns pages only from that domain.  This gives you the chance to discover Wikipedia articles which were highly rated by people of the same tastes as yourself.


7. A better way to search Wikipedia and its sources



 wikiseek


The contents of Wikiseek are restricted to Wikipedia pages AND only those sites which are referenced within Wikipedia, making it an authoritative source of information less subject to spam and SEO schemes.

On top of that, it comes with a powerful AJAX interface for search-as-you-type functionality.

8. Get Wikipedia’s ‘Featured Article’ in your email


Learn something new everyday with the best of Wikipedia delivered to you.


Featured articles are considered to be the best articles in Wikipedia, as determined by Wikipedia’s editors. Before being listed here, articles are reviewed for accuracy, neutrality, completeness, and style.  To give you an idea about it’s exclusivity, currently only one in 1,270 articles is listed here.  Get a daily dosage via email with this subscription link.



9. Find out which Wikipedia Articles are the most popular


The Google Trends hot keywords list shows you the search terms which are gaining momentum, which is good, but Wikicharts goes one step further by providing all Wikipedia stats by topic, and quantifying them.  Because Wikipedia is so widely used, you can safely assume that it truly represents how interested people are about a certain topic.


10. Optimize Wikipedia for your mobile phone


 mobile



 Everything from the screen aspect as well as the content loaded has been optimized for mobile usage in this Mobile-Wikipedia project.  What does this translate into?  Faster loading time for on a phone, a better viewing experience, and information literally at your fingertips.


Bonus tip #1: Check out Uncyclopedia - the Wikipedia clone where practically nothing is true, but pretty funny



Bonus tip #2: One of the weirdest Wikipedia categories ever

1 comment:

James said...

Thanks for blogging my stuff.

Pls note that I only allow excerpts to be shared, and not the full posts. Also all excepts should have live links going back to the post :)

Thanks once more for picking my work to be shared, but please help amend those posts as soon as possible, or take them down...

Cheers James