Wikipedia Will Soon Be Available Via Text Messages
pigrabbitbear writes "Even as we all love to debate the scholarly merits of Wikipedia, there's no denying that it's an immensely powerful research and learning tool. That goes doubly so in poor nations, where access to education materials can be limited to nonexistent. To that end, Wikimedia started the Wikipedia Zero project, which aims to partner with mobile service providers to bring Wikipedia to poor regions free of charge. It's a killer strategy, because while computer and internet access is still fleeting for much of the world, cell phones are far more ubiquitous. Wikimedia claims that four mobile partnerships signed since 2012 brings free Wiki service to 330 million cell subscribers in 35 countries, a huge boon for folks whose phones have web capability but who can't afford data charges."
thx
Sounds useful:
SMS to Wikipedia: "water purification"
This article is about large scale, municipal water purification. For portable/emergency water purification, see portable water purification. For industrial wate
Or, if they edit out the disambiguation preamble:
Water purification is the process of removing undesirable chemicals, biological contaminants, suspended solids and gases from contaminated water. The goal is to
SMS is the most expensive way to send data to mobiles by orders of magnitude. Not sure this solves much of a problem.
Mobile providers will provide the TEXT (ie.low bandwidth) version of wikipedia free of charge, via a regular mobile data channel. They will not be providing Wikipedia via text message (SMS).
Every modern Android based phone can run the Wikipedia app or any of the variants. Given that wireless access is needed to get the text message, I fail to see how that is an improvement over access to the actual pages and full content.
Does this mean I can have edit wars while driving in my car?
You can do quite a lot with SMS: Google SMS does weather, search, directions, gmail, news headlines, etc. Twitter is a good example of an app (originally) based on text messaging. It may not be pretty, but it is simple, reliable, and efficient. For those reasons it is an important lifeline, Wikipedia obviously sees it that way, and I'm glad it's not being forgotten.
/. has had a robot overlord to read articles to you for quite some time now.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Does this mean I'll get twice the banner donation spam, or more now?
Wikimedia started the Wikipedia Zero project, which aims to partner with mobile service providers to bring Wikipedia to poor regions free of charge.
It's a killer strategy, because while computer and internet access is still fleeting for much of the world, cell phones are far more ubiquitous. Wikimedia claims that four mobile partnerships signed since 2012 brings free Wiki service to 330 million cell subscribers in 35 countries
So is this happening now, or sometime in the future? And is actually via text message, or via free web access?
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
Wikipedia's culture is broken. I left a few months ago, essentially because I saw that a small minority of users wikidrama/wikilawyer to the point of harassing anyone with whom they disagree. But the foundation spends time/money on an SMS version instead of fixing their broken culture? Misplaced priorities.