Are you familiar with the concept of 'architectural forgery'? Before today, neither was I. In Japan, proposed construction exceeding a certain number of floors must prove it is structurally safe (and, importantly, earthquake resistant) by submitting architectural drawings and calculations to the authorities. In late 2005, it came to light that a number of earthquake design calculations submitted by structural engineer Hidetsugu Aneha had used falsified data, causing a ripple effect that ultimately bankrupted a number of construction firms and real estate companies across Japan.
I learnt the above interesting nugget via WikiTok, a project that reimagines your Wikipedia rabbit hole as a neverending, scrollable feed a la TikTok (via Ars Technica). Rather than offering reams of text, the page presents each article as an image-led stub summary with click-through links to sate your curiosity. Though you can access Wiktok via desktop, it really is best suited to your phone screen—just like its primary source of inspiration.
At present, WikiTok's scrollable selection is a vertical conga line of totally random articles drawn from Wikipedia's API. You can save articles that catch your eye for later by liking them, though, unlike TikTok, there are currently no videos and no invasive data tracking.
The project was made by Isaac Gemal, who used AI coding tools Cursor and Claude to build a prototype in a little under two hours. Gemal told Ars Technica, «The entire thing is only several hundred lines of code, and Claude wrote the vast majority of it.» You can poke around the project yourself at GitHub here.
Inspiration for the project first arrived in the form of this X post thread, with Tyler Angert of Patina Systems even coining the term 'Wikitok.' That was on February 3, and Gemal had a prototype by 2 AM the next morning. He told Ars Technica, «AI helped me ship really really fast and just capitalize on the initial viral tweet asking for Wikipedia with scrolling.»
Gemal wasn't
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