Why stop at read-only content? Why not take advantage of people trapped in a can for their flight time? You could solicit contributions from people, most of whom probably have never contributed to Wikipedia before. You could even gamify it based on competition between those on the same flight, one flight against another, etc.
The technical difficulty here would be to support a system allowing revisions from multiple sources with local clones of Wikipedia, asynchronously, into the "source" Wikipedia. But it would be worth it.
Daren
On Jul 30, 2017 19:01, "James Heilman" jmh649@gmail.com wrote:
Amazing idea. I guess one could email them and offer this. Would not add weight on their end as it is simple digital. The entertainment system would be completely separate from the flight systems so would not have significant certification issues.
James
On Sun, Jul 30, 2017 at 4:50 PM, Lodewijk lodewijk@effeietsanders.org wrote:
I know that KLM included some cuts from Wikipedia articles in their onflight system to explain sights from at least San Francisco. Not sure whether they made it scale, probably not.
Lodewijk
On Mon, Jul 31, 2017 at 12:13 AM, Pierre-Selim pierre-selim@huard.info wrote:
Certification process for the hardware of kiwix might be a tremendous
pain
in the ass.
And second point the airline will need a business case to cary more
weight
(count about 3.5% of the weight as extra fuel burn per hour).
That said I'd love to use Wikipedia on an IFE.
Le 31 juil. 2017 00:02, "Daniel Mietchen" <daniel.mietchen@googlemail.
com>
a écrit :
Hi,
during long flights, I have often been wondering why there is no Wikimedia option in in-flight entertainment systems. As I am normally offline during flights and I normally don't think about in-flight stuff while on the ground, I never actually asked around, so after a long flight yesterday, here we go: Do any of you know of attempts to explore the option(s) to get Wikimedia content onto in-flight entertainment and similar systems?
Many of them already have educational content, but I am not aware of anything openly licensed amidst those offerings. Have any of the Kiwix team looked into this?
Also, many airlines/ ships/ trains and others offer WiFi for a fee - has the Wikipedia Zero team ever looked into engaging with such "providers"?
Thanks and cheers,
Daniel
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