Show HN: Discover Wikipedia articles popular on Hacker News

orangecrumbs.com

61 points by octopus143 9 hours ago


moehm - an hour ago

Oh, nice execution. I had the same idea during the pandemic. Though my aesthetics are completely different as I focused more on the discussions on HN, as they often have some golden nuggets. Yours is of course way more polished, as I basically just slapped bootstrap on my database front end.

https://www.mostdiscussed.com/

Interesting how different our "popularity score" is though: https://www.mostdiscussed.com/popular

You don't seem to group them by category, right? I found it quite interesting: https://www.mostdiscussed.com/popular/topics

Btw, your "new" tab seems to be broken, as it is showing articles from 2019.

gnatman - 4 hours ago

Cool! I’ve been using this bookmark for years:

https://news.ycombinator.com/from?site=wikipedia.org

captn3m0 - 6 hours ago

Other modes worth trying: "Mailing Lists", "Research Papers"

mdp2021 - 5 hours ago

> Discover Wikipedia articles popular on Hacker News

Wikipedia articles _and YT videos_.

Amazing result, very precious, just skimming in it for a few minutes was immensely enriching.

sdan - an hour ago

nice! kind of similar but re-made a scrollable wikipedia a few weeks ago: https://quack.sdan.io/

josters - 6 hours ago

Nicely done! Would be interesting to sort by upvotes and/or comment count as well.

tacone - 4 hours ago

Looks great, especially on mobile, congrats!

TZubiri - 3 hours ago

5 stars, delved

beefmumbai - 2 hours ago

Yaaaayy - MORE Commiepedia!

h4kunamata - 3 hours ago

Wikepedia, the most untrustworthy source ever, cases and cases of people who gained access to the article and completely changed it with fake information:

1. Assassin's Creed video game: A guy changed Japanese history by introducing a black samurai. The whole dramas was so bad that Janapense officials got involved, and one of the reasons Ubisoft Studio which was already broke due to DEI, went even more bankrupt.

2. A lawyer changed specific laws on Wikipedia and waited, as expected, judges were caught using the "fabricated law" against real cases with real consequences.

I could go on and on, but hey, you do you :)