Thanks Tilman. It's nice to see apps using Wikipedia data. My personal favorite is FieldTrip[1] which is basically the same thing as Curiousity but with more data sources[2].

Since Curiousity is charging for the app, it would be nice to see them contribute back to projects in some way.

-Toby

[1] http://www.fieldtripper.com/
[2] Interestingly, the same people who made field trip went on the make Ingress which proves a virtual world is more interesting than the real world ;)

On Tue, Dec 29, 2015 at 12:19 AM, Tilman Bayer <tbayer@wikimedia.org> wrote:
Launched on December 8. See
http://lifehacker.com/curiosity-shows-you-useful-wikipedia-articles-right-whe-1748791446
http://9to5mac.com/community/curiosity-by-tamper-a-beautiful-context-aware-wikipedia-reader-for-iphone/


Features (from https://tamper.io/curiosity/ ):

"
Nearby
[...] Curiosity uses your location to find interesting articles nearby.

Popular
[...] Curiosity displays the most popular articles for a given day,
week, or month all in one place.

Explore
[...] Receive articles from hand-picked categories that adapt to
factors such as time, location, and current events. Learn about Famous
Inventors, Movies Filmed Nearby, or many other categories being added
and updated regularly.

Bookmarks & History [...]

Search [...]

Read & Share [...]
"

It's *almost* like they saw
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:IOS_Wikipedia_App_5.0_Update.pdf
;)


--
Tilman Bayer
Senior Analyst
Wikimedia Foundation
IRC (Freenode): HaeB

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