XOWA is an open source application for managing Wikipedia database exports. XOWA is fully cross platform and can run on practically any computer. It can automatically manage wikipedia versions and languages.

For a proof of concept system, I will be running a simple Debian virtual machine on KVM. This config will work fine with Simple Wikipedia with images, but will absolutely not be able to handle a full wikipedia.org database.


How To Download Wikipedia Offline


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Wikipedia is available for free download, in its entirety, at www.kiwix.org. I was able to download it at a public access point and transfer it to the hard drive of my home computer. It comes compiled as a single compressed .zim file, along with open source browser software that allows you to view the content. This is great if you are in prison, on a boat, or in an RV in the middle of nowhere. Or if you are in a country that restricts access to the internet. You can have Wikipedia with you wherever you go. I don't have internet at home, so having an offline version of Wikipedia on my home computer has been a huge blessing, as it allows me and my family to access nearly 5.5 million articles on all subjects. Downloading Wikipedia sounds simple enough but the logistics involved can get kinda tricky and require a bit of planning. I will help you. Before you download anything, I recommend you read this entire instructable.

Wikipedia is available in hundreds of languages. Also, just about every version of Wikipedia is available with or without pictures. The pictures are compressed, and not the same quality as you would find if you were actually accessing Wikipedia's servers. Still, they make up a large portion of the size of each package. If you don't want or need the pictures, then going with "no pics" package is the best choice for you. Every six months or so, the people of the Kiwix foundation compile a new .zim file, which contains an up-to-date version of Wikipedia. Invariably, the new package is bigger in size than the old one. Currently the only way to update your offline version of Wikipedia is to download an entirely new package.

Wikipedia aims to provide knowledge to the world and it allows for offline downloads in order to reach the 4 billion people without internet access. The online encyclopedia has made it to outer space, to tiny villages in South America, and to rural classrooms in West Africa.

A new archive of the entirety of English Wikipedia for Kiwix, an offline browser for web content, is now available for download to anyone who wants to browse offline or have a local backup of the online encyclopedia.

The archive was noticed by a person on Reddit who shared it in a post. The person included a link to the website for Kiwix, where the 89 GB ZIM file (a format for offline wiki content) is available for download.

Kiwix is an offline reader for Web content. It's especially intended to make Wikipedia available offline (see features). This is done by reading the content of the project stored in a file format ZIM, a high compressed open format with additional meta-data.

Senior Program Manager Anne Gomez leads the New Readers initiative, where she works on ways to better understand barriers that prevent people around the world from accessing information online. One of her areas of interest is offline access, as she works with the New Readers team to improve the way people who have limited or infrequent access to the Internet can access free and open knowledge.

Wikipedia offline has been the major resource present on the internet-in-a-box devices which I have been studying in various clinical settings as well as using personally in my own practice. I am an emergency department physician working in New York City. Additionally I specialize in global health, meaning that my work takes me from busy inner city emergency rooms to refugee camps in Greece taking care of desperate Syrian refugees with various degrees of medically complex complaints. Offline Wikipedia and WikiMedicine have been extremely useful in my work both clinically both with patient care and medical education. Education is a big component of the what makes offline Wikipedia useful as it allows me to conduct real time training and education with my medical students and residents as they see patients and learn about clinical medicine.

My involvement with the WikiMedicine project was very fortuitous as it involved several pieces of a larger puzzle coming together. One of my colleagues at Mount Sinai, Ramona Sunderwirth, an experienced global health practitioner is friends with Anne Nelson, an accomplished journalist and faculty member at Columbia University. Anne Nelson had been working with the Internet-in-a-box device with James Heilman for educational purposes and I was then brought into the project to apply these offline resources with providers and educators in a medical setting.

As with most new technology, there are several kinks which need to be worked out with the offline Wikipedia usage and internet-in-a-box in general. Searchability across different applications seems to be a constant issue brought up by users which is being worked on by the technical team behind the internet-in-a-box device. Connecting to the device and disconnecting from the device to use data can be cumbersome and an easier way to toggle between WiFi connections would be beneficial. In general however, having additional resources is never really a weakness, when it comes to high quality medical resources, the more the merrier.

Slowly but surely, I have made offline Wikipedia the primary focus of my career and research and I plan to continue in that vein. I have conducted research, spoken at several international conferences and have used the device extensively both clinically and as a medical educator. I plan to be extensively involved with offline Wikipedia moving forward both abroad and at home as I step into my new role moving to the University of California at Riverside being involved in emergency resident education.

The Wikimedia Foundation can be very helpful in supporting this project and supporting physician use of Wikipedia. The more offline Wikipedia is integrated into clinical care the more trusted and used a resource it has the potential to become.

Funding is always important and critically lacking in these endeavours. Funding can support dedicated computer developers,researchers and wikipedians to improve, revise and edit medical content in a large and concerted way. Several research projects involving clinical use of the device in various settings are being planned; Nigeria, Guatemala and Ethiopia however their success is in jeopardy because of lack of resources to fund some of these projects.

The Wikimedia Foundation could use its substantial reach to publicize the medical utility of offline Wikipedia and the efforts of our group to use Wikipedia to improve patient care and medical education. Additionally, there are several medical resources which would be wonderful to partner with and place on the internet-in-a-box device. While Wikipedia is a fantastic resource, it is not the only resource and using the Wikimedia Foundation to partner with local governments and other organizations to create a robust and inclusive medical portfolio on the Internet-in-a-box would be extremely helpful for this initiative.

I'm looking to make a wiki for personal/private use. HOWEVER, in the past I have had people find my private wikis and bug me about them which has led to me deleting them- so such an option is off the table for me. Additionally, I'd like to keep the information on it as private as possible in case I use it in the future and want it to be a surprise (a mentallity which goes against the nature of a service like Wikia, I'm aware). Since I know how wikia works and it has all of the features I'd want (infoboxes, categories, hyperlinks to pages on the wiki and off the wiki, etc), I was wondering if there was any offline wiki making services that funtion near-identically to Wikia? If not, does anyone have any recommendations for offline services that function similarly?

I've never heard nor do I believe that there are website services that are identical to FANDOM in terms of the functionality you're talking about. FANDOM is very unique and the only thing that comes close to it is Wikipedia itself - I'd be amazed to find any online websites that come remotely close to it. Plus there is no such thing as an "offline wiki" that still belongs to the FANDOM wiki network.

Slightly reworded, of course external links or interwiki links to, say, wikipedia, won't work while you are offline, but otherwise your personal wiki is hosted on your personal box (laptop, smart phone, whatever), and as admin of this box you decide if it can be reached at all from other boxes. See wikipedia:firewall as an example for an interwiki link ;-)

Kiwix is a free and open-source offline web browser created by Emmanuel Engelhart and Renaud Gaudin in 2007.[6] It was first launched to allow offline access to Wikipedia. But it has expanded to include other projects from the Wikimedia Foundation as well as public domain texts from Project Gutenberg. It is available in more than 100 languages. Kiwix has been included in several high-profile projects, from smuggling operations in North Korea[7] and encyclopedic access in Cuba[8] to Google Impact Challenge's recipient Bibliothques Sans Frontires.[9]

After becoming a Wikipedia editor in 2004, Engelhart became interested in developing offline versions of Wikipedia. A project to make a Wikipedia CD, initiated in 2003, was a trigger for the project.[6]

The software is designed as an offline reader for a web content. It can be used on computers without an internet connection, computers with a slow or expensive connection, or to avoid censorship. It can also be used while travelling (e.g. on a passenger plane or a train).

Users first download Kiwix. Then they download content for offline viewing with Kiwix. Compression saves disk space and bandwidth. All of English-language Wikipedia, with pictures, fits on a large USB stick or external media (82 GB as of march 2021, or 43 GB with no pictures).[12][14] ff782bc1db

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