Explore Wikipedia Like a Windows XP Desktop

(explorer.samismith.com)

181 points | by smusamashah 3 hours ago

28 comments

  • hliyan 57 minutes ago
    Incredibly beautiful, possibly because it maps so well to the mental model we typically use to organize knowledge in our heads. I don't know how we lost the folder/container vs. document/content iconography, and other things (like layout of items, sorting) during the shift to web applications.
    • cheschire 23 minutes ago
      Knowledge doesn’t neatly align to a nested hierarchy. Especially written knowledge.

      Language is an imperfect means to convey knowledge, and people store that knowledge in subjective and highly personal ways.

      You may mentally recall balloons within “entertainment” or “party”, whereas I might store that knowledge under “horror”.

      Add onto that the massive focus on using graph theory to scale social networking technologically, and you effectively lose any motivation for rigid hierarchy.

      • darkwater 8 minutes ago
        A folder system doesn't have to be strictly rigid, you can still have "symlinks" so the same article appearing in different folders (aka labels if you can easily duplicate content inside folders, but you retain the nested, drill-down approach)
    • sznio 49 minutes ago
      I guess this model doesn't maximize engagement
  • cube00 23 minutes ago
    This is exactly what I imagined the original Microsoft Network in Windows 95 would have been like.

    And so The Microsoft Network wasn't a program you loaded like CompuServe. It was part of the OS, with folder icons that looked just like real folders. It was a kind of version of the Web where you could browse online data the same way you browsed your file system. This is what made it cool.

    It was as if the data was suddenly free of the shackles of being displayed in a program. Data wasn't just a web page, or a program showing its own internal databases. The Microsoft Network made it look like the data was right there, and you could click it and drag it around! For a brief time, back in 1995, it felt like we were on the verge of the true object-oriented web, a world filled with open data and free from the tyranny of the walled gardens.[1]

    It also reminded me what an excellent job Wikipedia does with their hierarchical classification which you don't see when you're often searching by article name.

    [1]: https://web.archive.org/web/20260129143542/https://www.coder...

  • woodydesign 5 minutes ago
    This is so Cool! Great concepts and execution. I could imagine this way of interaction and exploration apply to Educational area
  • dewey 2 hours ago
    The shininess looks a bit more like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_XP_Media_Center_Editio... and not like the regular Windows XP, but still a fun project!
  • moffkalast 5 minutes ago
    Ok this is a genuinely perfect way to research an entire field by article instead of having to jump recursively link to link and forgetting what you were doing 5 minutes ago.

    I've never seen wikipedia from this categorized vantage point. If we're being real their UX is kinda crap outside the usual search->article->link flow and could use a complete rework.

  • eur0pa 23 minutes ago
    Beautiful memories of browsing random topics in Microsoft Encarta '97
  • crabmusket 1 hour ago
    Where does the hierarchical classification come from?
  • sagacity 1 hour ago
    This is genuinely a really fun way to browse Wikipedia. Only drawback is that folder names that contain ellipsis don't show the full name when clicked.
  • tigerlily 43 minutes ago
    Oh wow, to me the history section feels like Civilopedia (in a good way). I can't explain why.
  • rigonkulous 17 minutes ago
    I'd like to see a gource interface to Wikipedia, personally ..
  • pixlmint 1 hour ago
    Such a cool project! Now it's just missing search and a request for donations
    • emil-lp 1 hour ago
      It's also missing the defrag tool. Without it, it's going to be very slow as the disk fills up.

      Should put a shortcut to it on the desktop as well, so that users who experience significant lag can defrag at will.

  • angilr 2 hours ago
    It is nice. I randomly click on something interest just appear in my mind and lead to this: life -> death -> last_words -> More milk. But I can't find it on Wiki. I search More milk. and the first result is this page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Michael_Jackson. Hmm, why is the name different?
    • flexagoon 1 hour ago
      "More milk" is a redirect to that page

      https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=More_milk.&redire...

      The "Windows XP" website displays the same article when you click on "More milk" there

      • angilr 1 hour ago
        Wow, do you know what is the relationship between More milk and the death of MJ?
        • Kwpolska 1 hour ago
          The Wikipedia article does:

          > After several hours and several drug injections, Jackson was still unable to fall asleep, and, according to Murray, was repeatedly asking him for "milk", a nickname for the powerful surgical general anesthetic propofol, which Jackson had used in the past as a sleep aid. At 10:40 a.m., with Jackson still not asleep, Murray relented to his requests and injected him with 25 milligrams of propofol diluted with lidocaine. With Jackson finally asleep, Murray testified that he left his bedside to go to the bathroom, and after returning two minutes later, discovered that Jackson was not breathing and had a weak pulse.

          • angilr 1 hour ago
            Thanks! TIL that Propofol has a nickname "Milk of amnesia". MJ asked more milk which meant more propofol.
  • kramit1288 1 hour ago
    This looks really cool. feels nostalgic. it would be more fun if it can be switched into whatever desktop mode i want like unix.
  • steveharing1 1 hour ago
    What a beautiful nostalgic feeling. Keep up the good work! Worth adding some start menu options as well.
  • macwhisperer 1 hour ago
    pretty cool! needs the search function to work tho to be useful
  • unrvl22 2 hours ago
    love how it loads instantly and feels smooth. imo useless but still cool
    • kristianp 47 minutes ago
      > love how it loads instantly and feels smooth.

      Unlike Wikipedia these days.

      • hexagonwin 30 minutes ago
        wikipedia is fine, and you can still use vector or even monobook skins. try adding ?useskin=monobook at the end of the url
    • dolmen 1 hour ago
      Yes. It definitely lacks the hourglass mouse cursor experience!
    • senfiaj 1 hour ago
      I guess XP (x64) could run like this on modern PCs.
  • soupspaces 23 minutes ago
    Is there a way to go up/back a folder without clicks? Enter key goes into folders.
  • Eonexus 1 hour ago
    This is just beautiful. I wonder if this could turn into different styles, like that of a book, or a cabinet?
  • jdw64 1 hour ago
    Seeing the Windows XP theme I loved the most really brings back a wave of nostalgia
  • DeathArrow 1 hour ago
    Well, it should also have Solitaire and Minesweeper. :)
  • arnon 1 hour ago
    make it look like encarta 95 and you'll have a REAL winner on your hands
  • hnlmorg 1 hour ago
    I guess appearance is subjective because I always considered XP to be the ugliest Windows ever released.
  • koolala 48 minutes ago
    trying to find what folder has Дэбі робіць Даляс
  • Uptrenda 38 minutes ago
    Somehow the format makes me feel like its easier to learn here than the intimidating encyclopedia theme of wikipedia. It's interesting to consider the effect that presentation of information might have on learning. We know that physical books are said to be better for learning (I have heard people go up by an entire grade if they use them), but maybe there is something to be said for themes, too.
  • dunderd 43 minutes ago
    Very cool!
  • redox99 1 hour ago
    Is there a reason why it looks like Temu's Windows XP? Copyright concerns I guess?
    • Gualdrapo 9 minutes ago
      Not sure why they downvoted you because you have a point - icons are not the same as Windows XP's, wallpaper flat color reminds me more of Win 95/98 and the taskbar design has some details that do not match precisely with Windows XP's. I'd also bet it's due to copyright concerns
    • sunaookami 1 hour ago
      Because it's obviously vibe coded (look at the source code).
  • prokajevo 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • hacker_mar 48 minutes ago
    [dead]