I wore the world's first HDR10 smart glasses TCL's new E Ink tablet beats the Remarkable and Kindle Anker's new charger is one of the most unique I've ever seen Best laptop cooling pads Best flip ...
OpenMoko’s WikiReader is a unique gadget with a single function. The simple handheld device stores the text of over 3 million Wikipedia entries, enabling convenient offline access to the popular ...
Openmoko, maker of the first open source cell phone, released its new WikiReader handheld. The $99 device allows you to browse over 3 million Wikipedia entries without the need for wired, or wireless ...
I haven’t been able to lay my hands on one of Openmoko’s cute WikiReader devices yet, but given my 10-year-old son Tristan’s proclivity for reading Wikipedia over nearly everything else there is to do ...
While the WikiReader might seem like a bit redundant to the smartphone crowd, but it’s no doubt an invaluable tool to those without Internet access — or the Luddite crowd. The self-contained device ...
Ever wished you had a copy of Wikipedia in your pocket? To be fair, as long as you have a reasonably recent phone, a data connection and a few minutes you can pull up the mobile version of the online ...
In 2009, the world met the WikiReader, a single-purpose gadget that holds all 6.5 million articles on English Wikipedia, from the depopulation of cockroaches in post-Soviet states to the list of lists ...
There are few better illustrations of the staggering advance of digital technology than the WikiReader. It’s the size of a thick table coaster, and contains nearly the entire text of the English ...
WikiReader, the palm-sized device that makes Wikipedia entries available offline, has gone multilingual. In addition to being able to store the more than three million English language Wikipedia ...
Openmoko announced today the availability of WikiReader, a palm-sized electronic encyclopedia containing the more than three million English language articles of Wikipedia that can be accessed ...
WikiReader is a handheld device for people who rely on the information contained at Wikipedia more often than they have access to the Internet. The offline, "always on" unit is designed to deliver ...
There are few better illustrations of the staggering advance of digital technology than the WikiReader. It’s the size of a thick table coaster, and contains nearly the entire text of the English ...