This page is currently inactive and is retained for
historical reference. Either the page is no longer relevant or consensus on its purpose has become unclear. To revive discussion, seek broader input via a forum such as the
village pump. It was last substantively updated 23 August 2008.
WikiReaders are collections of articles from Wikipedia on a certain topic, in the form of PDFs published for download and intended to be printed, and also to be sold in printed form.
Their intention is to start a revision process on this topic and clarify the current state of this topic.
The state of the WikiReader project for other languages is at
meta:WikiReader.
Currently, the German Wikipedia has three WikiReaders for sale, and several to download. The German Wikipedians are thus the pioneers of printing Wikipedia material. If you know German, read
de:Wikipedia:WikiReader, and help us catch up and become "published".
Status: Getting the articles on the contents list up to scratch - several are featured, most have plenty of content, but general copyediting and polishing is required.
Release date: project begun May 2005, no release date.
Status: Looking for articles to be included!
Note: Reader's Digest® is a
registered trademark for a magazine and various books published by the company of the same name in the United States, and it will need a different name.
Scope: A book of the articles describing and analysing 'poetries national and international', including the significant British, French, Irish, Urdu and Japanese categories within Wikipedia, as well as various lesser-known international poetries and poets.
Scope: Locates Hollywood in time and space (Part 1), talks about the people (Part 2-1 roles such as actors, directors, producers and cinematographers, while Part 2-2 concentrates on biographical data about the figures), the institutions (such as Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Paramount, MGM and Dreamworks) and the films that have made and shaped 20th century Hollywood, including Best Pictures editorially selected, as well as B-films and certain genres.
OpenOffice.org is a free application that has been used for the first wikireaders to create PDFs.
There is an OpenOffice.org
Template for German WikiReaders and there is a (unofficial)
template in English. The English version is basically a copy (layout) of the German one.
Wiki -> PDF
The German Wikipedia project used Gynecology Reader use
WIKI->PDFSkript to make a reader. This service was taken down in August 2005 because of software bugs, and has not been reactivated.
What worked:
Basic formatting: bold, italics,
Headers,
Wiki-links and external links,
Lists and indentation
What the script couldn't yet handle:
Images
Tables
Templates
Other
Scribus is also a free text editor with PDF-export possibilities.