Afripedia Project Explained

Afripedia Project
Start-Date:2012

The Afripedia Project is a project to expand offline Wikipedia access in French-speaking Africa, and encourage Africans to contribute to Wikipedia.[1] The project installs local Kiwix-serve wireless and intranet servers and provides training and maintenance.[2]

The project offers content besides Wikipedia, such as Wiktionary. Any content that is first packaged in a ZIM file can be relayed over the Afripedia network;[3] Project Gutenberg and Wikisource, for instance, are available in that format.[4]

History

The Afripedia Project launched in 2012. The founding partners were Wikimédia France, the Institut Français, and the Agence universitaire de la Francophonie.[5] French is spoken by an estimated 120 million (2010) people in Africa, spread across 24 francophone countries.[6]

Project preparation, partnership formation, Kiwix algorithm development took place in 2011.

In July 2012 the project and prototype was presented at the Forum mondial de la langue française in Québec. In November 15 leaders from 12 East and Central African countries were trained and 15 offline access points were deployed.

Additional training session were held in 2013 and 2014.

Access to Wikipedia from USB flash drives was not new at the time, but the data they care quickly befome outdated. Afripedia by contrast is regularly updated.[7] Many of the partnering universities have low-bandwidth internet and a few lack any internet access.[8]

The project encourages the formation of Afripedia clubs for local users.[9]

The project was described as a worthy stopgap measure, until such time as internet access can be developed throughout Africa.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Duchemin . Dorothée . 2012-06-22 . Afripedia, Wikipédia pour l'Afrique . 2023-11-28 . Citazine . fr-FR.
  2. https://blog.wikimedia.org/2013/01/24/afripedia-project-increasing-off-line-access-to-wikipedia-in-africa/ Afripedia project increasing off-line access to Wikipedia in Africa, Wikimedia article
  3. https://wiki.kiwix.org/Content_in_all_languages Kiwix list of available content
  4. Emmanuel Engelhart: 50.000 public domain books available to everybody, everywhere, offline. In: Wikisource-l-Mailinglist. 19. November 2014. Accessed on 26 November 2014.
  5. Web site: 2012-06-22 . Afripedia ou comment consulter Wikipedia sans Internet . 2023-11-28 . Slate Afrique . fr-FR.
  6. La Francophonie dans le monde 2006–2007 published by the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie. Nathan, Paris, 2007
  7. Web site: Afripédia : un projet de promotion de Wikipédia en Afrique, news article in Afrik . 2016-02-10 . 2017-09-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170905140046/http://www.afrik.com/article25968.html . dead .
  8. http://ultimategerardm.blogspot.ch/2014/11/wikimedia-project-gutenberg-sum-of-all.html
    1. Wikimedia & Project #Gutenberg – the sum of all knowledge on Words and what not blog
  9. [:fr:Projet:Afripédia|Afripedia project website]