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Like millions of others, I use the Wikipedia pretty regularly. It's an excellent resource to check a fact or learn about something new. My only real complaint is that there's often too much information there, or at least too much to take in at one time. Here's a good example: After reading a couple of outstanding books over the past year or two, I'm suddenly interested in learning as much as I can about World War II. The Wikipedia is a great starting point; after all, look at all the WWII content it has to offer. I can't possibly read all that, including the dozens and dozens of links off that page, in one sitting. That got me thinking... The DailyLit (www.dailylit.com) model is a clever way to read a book on a cellphone, a Blackberry or other device, one small chunk at a time. Wouldn't it be cool if DailyLit (or some other enterprising person/organization) would add a Wikipedia content service to their site? Hundreds if not thousands of categories could be configured and bite-size pieces of that content would show up in your e-mail in-box, ready to be read on your handheld device. Keep in mind that the Wikipedia's contents are made available through the GNU Free Documentation License, which states that anyone has the "freedom to copy and redistribute it, with or without modifying it, either commercially or noncommercially." Because of the "copyleft" approach used, "derivative works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense." So that means if someone were to use the Wikipedia content for something like this, they could charge for the service, but they'd have to make the resulting content available under the same terms (e.g., they wouldn't own it exclusively). DailyLit already has the infrastructure in place. All they'd have to do is create the categories and then have their editors "chunkify" the relevant Wikipedia articles so they can be served up like all the other products they currently offer. I don't know about you, but I'd sign up for an annual subscription for something like this. It might only be $20 or $30 per year, but it would be worth every penny, assuming it allows me to sign up for any number of topical feeds throughout the year. Maybe I'd finally learn all the facts about World War II, and I could do it while standing in line at the grocery store or while waiting for a meeting to start!
jwikert, Feb 11 2008
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What's with all the //?They're very annoying
I don't think I'd ever want to pay for a company to chunk info from wikipedia for me to read it on a daily basis. For instance, when I'm reading about the B-29 and learn that there's a Russian version of it, I want to be able to just seach to that version without restriction.
I've never used or heard of dailylit and I won't considering reading a book on my cellphone, so maybe I'm not your potential customer.
And then we made an American version of the Russian version, which we called the B50, IMO. They have part of one at the Chino Air Museum in California.
WP is constantly changing so there's no point reading it in a linear fashion. There are already daily articles for free on the front page, so this idea is a little redundant.