From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wikitravel is a project to create an
open content, complete, up-to-date, and reliable world-wide
travel guide. Although it uses a
wiki
model to create the guide and to deliver it on the
World Wide Web, the project is also aimed towards production
of printed guides. Wikitravel is built in collaboration by
Wikitravellers from around the globe. Articles can cover any
level of geographic specificity, from continents to districts of
a city. These are logically connected in a hierarchy, by
specifying that the location covered in one article "is in" the
larger location described by another. The project also includes
articles on travel-related topics, phrasebooks for travelers,
and suggested itineraries.
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Contents
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1
History
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2
Languages
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3
References
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4
See also
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5
External Links
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History
Wikitravel was started in
July 2003 by Evan Prodromou and Michele Ann Jenkins,
inspired in part by
Wikipedia
[1]. The project uses the
MediaWiki software, which is also used by Wikipedia.
However, Wikitravel is not a
Wikimedia project; it was begun independently. Unlike
Wikipedia, it uses the
Creative Commons
Attribution ShareAlike license rather than the
GNU Free Documentation License. Among other things, this
more easily allows individuals, tourism agencies, etc. to make
free reprints of individual pages. Although both Wikipedia and
Wikitravel are
free content resources, because of the incompatible
licenses, content cannot be freely copied between them.
Wikitravel's different objectives have also resulted in
different policies and content guidelines. For example, rather
than a strict neutral point of view requirement, Wikitravel
encourages editors to express their personal opinions with the
requirement to "be fair".
On
April 20,
2006,
Wikitravel announced that it and
World66 another open-content travel guide had been
acquired by
Internet Brands.[1]
The new owner hired Prodromou and Jenkins to continue managing
Wikitravel as a consensus-based project. They explained that
Internet Brands' long-term plan was for Wikitravel to continue
to focus on collaborative, objective guides, while World66 would
focus more on personal experiences and reviews.
As a result much of the German language community decided to
fork the German Wikitravel, which is released since December
10, 2006 as
Wikivoyage.
Milestones
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December 23,
2005 10,000 articles across all versions
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June 11,
2006 10,000 articles on the English version
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September 29,
2006 20,000 articles across all versions
Languages
Wikitravel is a multilingual project available in 15
languages, with each language-specific project developed
independently. In order of launch:
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English
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Romanian
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French
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German
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Swedish
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Japanese
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Dutch
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Portuguese
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Spanish
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Polish
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Italian
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Esperanto
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Hungarian
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Catalan
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Finnish
References
- ^
Internet Brands (20 April, 2006).
Internet Brands Acquires Wikitravel And World66 Online
Travel Guides.
Press release.
See also
External Links
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Travel websites |
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Aviation Safety Network |
CheapTickets |
CentralR.com |
Expedia |
Hotels.com |
FlightAware |
Flyaow |
FlyerTalk |
Go10000 |
Gotobus |
IgoUgo |
Ixeo |
Kayak.com |
Lonely Planet |
Orbitz |
Opodo |
Priceline.com |
Railpage Australia |
Rough Guides |
Seatguru |
SideStep |
Site59.com |
Transport Direct |
Travel journal |
Travelocity |
TripAdvisor |
VEGAS.com |
Venere |
Virtualtourist | Wikitravel |
World66 |
Categories:
Creative Commons-licensed works |
Travel websites |
Tourism |
Wiki communities