A new way to browse Wikipedia [Hack Your Day]

I just found an application called IndyWiki that enables you to browse Wikipedia in a very different way than you’re used to. You search for a term, and it will show you a multitude of related things, like pics, links, sections and so on.

Although the interface is very intuitive, I think it needs a considerable facelift. It’s stark, and uses a gray interface reminiscent of 1997 applications. Despite this, the application is easily usable and is actually useful, it will increase your productivity by bypassing browsers and only showing you related info.

If you enter a term it will display pictures related to that term and the related article (if there is no disambiguation), plus related links, leading to other articles. I found it refreshing that you don’t see the whole article, you see only the first section. You can view other parts by using the contents navigation pane to the left. I love this because many times the info I want is in the middle of an article, but I don’t exactly know at which section. I can click on a section and take a look, if not there I just click on another one, no need to go back to the top.

If you enter a term like “GTD” you can see that the term refers to two different items. In the links section, you can choose which of the two you want, in this case we are looking for Getting Things Done of course.

Overall I think this may be a useful application, but there are some speed issues, as well as navigation and looks. It’s at 0.9.7, so I’m guessing the features they are looking for initially are implemented, and maybe for 1.0 they will develop a better interface.

Original post here: Daniel

4 February 2008 | Desktop Software, Productivity, browsing, wiki, wikipedia | Comments

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