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July 26, 2010 9:00 PM PDT

Cooliris turns Wikipedia into an iPad magazine

Cooliris Discover logo

The first thing that should come to mind when you think of Cooliris is photos. The company is well known for its imaging products, which include a very snazzy cross-platform browser add-on, an iPhone app, and embedded Web site and mobile phone technology. All of these are able to turn a collection of photos into an interactive, 3D wall, be it in on your browser, Web site, or cell phone.

But with its latest creation for Apple's iPad, called Discover, Cooliris is moving beyond the presentation and organization of photos and into something a little more pedestrian: text.

Discover, which was submitted to Apple on Tuesday, takes content from Wikipedia--both text and still images (but mostly just text), and splits it up into sections. These can be flipped through with your finger, instead of scrolling down a large page in Safari. The app also keeps track of where you've been so you can retrace your reading path if you've gone several pages deep.

"When the iPad came out, we took an idea we had, and said 'this is probably a perfect platform to try it on,'" Cooliris' executive VP of products Michele Turner told CNET. "This new application takes structured data--in this case Wikipedia, as the starting point. We've then created a templatized starting page and structured data from Wikipedia to let users navigate the depths of Wikipedia in a beautiful and efficient way."

The end result is a Wikipedia with larger text that can be read like an e-book, and photos that can be thumbed through and scaled up to the iPad's full resolution. The app also takes advantage of orientation to reposition, or expand or consolidate the data it's showing. Along the way, Cooliris serves up advertisements, which is where it can make some of its money given the app's free price tag.

Discovery by Cooliris

On the left is a Wikipedia page on cricketer Douglas Jardine as viewed in Safari on the iPad. On the right is the same page in one of Discover's templates. Users can flip through this like a book, instead of scrolling down a long page.

(Credit: Screenshots by Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

But why Wikipedia, and not a larger chunk of the Internet, as something like the recently popular Flipboard has done with RSS feeds? The short answer is that it's not there yet, but it will be soon. Turner and company do, in fact, envision Discover as a platform for various data feeds from around the Web. "We have over 100 content partners in the mainstream Cooliris product," Turner said. "The longer term opportunity is to work with the content partners to flow into this application, but that's kind of down the line."

Eventually the company plans to bring it to other platforms, including Android tablets. In making the iPad iteration of Discover, the company even built one for the iPhone, though Turner says it didn't feel quite right given the smaller form factor.

More pics of Discover can be seen after the break.

Discover by Cooliris

The first time you start Discover, it tells you how to use its four direction gesture interface.

(Credit: Screenshot by Josh Lowensohn/CNET)
The expanded view

While reading an article in landscape mode, Discover shows you related Wikipedia articles.

(Credit: Screenshot by Josh Lowensohn/CNET)
Search interface

Discover users can search Wikipedia right from the app. It includes the top result, and related articles.

(Credit: Screenshot by Josh Lowensohn/CNET)
Looking up definitions in Discover

If you don't know what a word is, or want to see another linked Wikipedia article, Discover lets you hold your finger of it to look it up.

(Credit: Screenshot by Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

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Josh Lowensohn joined CNET in 2006 and now covers Apple. Before that, Josh wrote about everything from new Web start-ups, to remote-controlled robots that watch your house.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (10 Comments)
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by Yelonde (2121 comments ) July 26, 2010 9:14 PM PDT
Behold, an enhancement to the already notorious creation I like to call, "Wikipedia: The Ultimate Time Waster".

Haha, but really, this is neat. I don't own an iPad, but this looks cool. I wish I could use it in person

*goes back to reading countless articles on wikipedia*
Reply to this comment 2 people like this comment
by drfillgood (1041 comments ) July 26, 2010 9:36 PM PDT
So they're going to be making advertising dollars repackaging Wikipedia? I hope they're donating a percentage of their income with Wikipedia.
Reply to this comment 5 people like this comment
by SofaKingdom (25 comments ) July 26, 2010 9:57 PM PDT
Is there anything from keeping this (and, similarly, Flipboard) as an iPad exclusive? This kind of presentation could easily be displayed on a web page or even a PC/OSX native application.
Reply to this comment
by EvanSei (1211 comments ) July 26, 2010 10:00 PM PDT
this looks very very cool.
Reply to this comment 1 person likes this comment
by whirledorder (56 comments ) July 26, 2010 11:24 PM PDT
Im surprised Apple hasn't banned it because it uses a third party technology to intercept web pages...Isn't that why Apple refused to let Flash apps (ported to native coco) run on IOS4? Obviously Apple has a double standard. Hope this goes noticed when the FTC and FCC are done with Apple.

Still, sounds like a cool thing.
Reply to this comment
by Martin Hairer (7 comments ) July 27, 2010 4:01 AM PDT
By that standard, they should probably ban about 50% of all iOS apps. The whole point of most apps is to pull content from the web and to display it into a nice user interface, this is no different. It has just nothing to do at all with the whole Flash thing...
by XCMeathead (132 comments ) July 27, 2010 3:28 AM PDT
No different from any of the other Wikipedia apps out there already for Android imho
Reply to this comment
by MikePulsifer (93 comments ) July 27, 2010 6:13 AM PDT
Sure it is. It's the user experience. Features != user experience.
by Aaron_Wessels (2 comments ) August 1, 2010 11:13 AM PDT
Hi there - this app is now live in the app store. Just search Discover and you will find it. As noted this application is free.

All my best,
-Aaron
Reply to this comment
by Aaron_Wessels (2 comments ) September 9, 2010 3:52 PM PDT
We wanted to let you know there is a new version of Discover by Cooliris available, now with offline mode.

Since launching July 31, Discover by Cooliris has been consistently ranking among the top free apps. Fast-forward [five weeks] and [225,000] downloads later, today?s launch of version 1.1 only promises to make Discover even hotter.

With the introduction of offline mode in Discover 1.1, users can enjoy Wikipedia articles with Discover anywhere and anytime when they are not connected to the Internet -- on an airplane, in a car, at the cabin in the woods, you name it. The upgrade also includes several tweaks that make navigation even more seamless.

To learn more you can see the full blog post: http://blog.cooliris.com/2010/09/09/discover-for-ipad-now-with-offline-mode/
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About Apple Talk

Josh Lowensohn grew up in a household full of technology. From a young age he was taking apart computers, snaking Cat 5 cable through walls, and reprogramming video games. Prior to joining CNET, Josh covered breaking video game news and wrote game reviews. Since then he's spent his time covering everything from Web apps to all of Microsoft's latest moves. For this blog, Josh is keeping a close eye on everything Apple.

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