Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Miss the old PC days? This website lets you experience Wikipedia like it’s Windows XP

This XP-style Wikipedia explorer turns online research into a nostalgia trip, while showing how much browsing changes when search takes a back seat

Add as a preferred source on Google
File, Webpage, Person
Sami Smith

Wikipedia has an unofficial new front door, and it looks like a desktop from a very specific era of family PCs, school labs, and chunky blue title bars.

Developer Sami Smith has built a browser-based Windows XP Wikipedia explorer that turns categories into folders and articles into documents. It’s playful, slightly inefficient, and more interesting than another AI search box bolted onto the web.

Recommended Videos

The site opens with desktop icons for Wikipedia, Media, Geofile Explorer, and a readme file. The Wikipedia folder lets you move through category folders, while Media turns Wikimedia Commons into something closer to an old image directory, complete with a way to set pictures as the background.

Why does the layout click

Smith’s site gives Wikipedia a visible route through its own structure. Instead of arriving at one article from a search engine, you move through broad categories, subfolders, and article documents.

Made a website where you can explore Wikipedia like it’s a file system on your desktop:https://t.co/DNDPeXLK3D pic.twitter.com/eAtx8cgarG

— sami (@hellosami) May 13, 2026

That old file-manager metaphor does a lot of work here. It makes the encyclopedia feel less like a page you land on and more like a space you rummage through.

The Geofile Explorer points in a similar direction, with a place-based system for moving through continents, countries, cities, and smaller regions. It’s still a demo-like feature, but it fits the whole desktop fantasy neatly.

Why does search feel smaller

The XP-style explorer works best when you don’t have a precise answer in mind. Search remains faster for checking a date, a name, or a definition, but it rarely encourages lingering.

This interface slows the process down and makes Wikipedia’s category system harder to ignore. That can be useful when you’re trying to understand a subject area rather than grab one fact and leave.

There’s a tradeoff. Wikipedia categories can be uneven, and early reactions have already pointed out that hierarchy isn’t always the best way to organize knowledge. The site also isn’t trying to replace regular Wikipedia for serious lookup work.

What should you use it for

Use it when you want to follow a topic sideways. The appeal is in opening a folder, finding an odd article, backing out, and noticing a path you wouldn’t have typed into a search bar.

The greyed-out Start menu items also make the project feel like a polished sketch rather than a finished alternate encyclopedia. That’s fine for now. Open it when regular Wikipedia feels too direct and you want the web to act a little weirder.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Microsoft is retiring the Together Mode in Teams in favor of something cleaner and simpler
Teams is retiring Together Mode for layouts people may actually use
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Microsoft Teams is retiring one of its more recognizable meeting features, and it might be for the best. The company announced that Together Mode is going away in Teams as Microsoft is shooting towards a simpler set of meeting layouts.

To recall, Together Mode was introduced during the pandemic-era video call boom, placing participants inside shared virtual environments such as auditoriums or classrooms. It was a cute idea at the time, but it never became the everyday meeting view for most people.

Read more
Experts are worried that smarter AI gets, the dumber we might become
Experts say chatbots can help research, but leaning on them too hard risks outsourcing the work that builds intelligence
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman during the Uncapped podcast in June 2025.

AI can now answer questions so quickly that the search itself can feel optional. That convenience worries the Royal Observatory Greenwich, which has warned that instant AI answers can weaken the curiosity, scrutiny, and source-checking behind real knowledge.

The risk hides inside the usefulness. Chatbots can help people test ideas, move faster, and find new angles, but a finished response can also cut users off from the messy trail that makes learning stick. When that happens, information arrives without the struggle that turns it into judgment.

Read more
Economy class method proposed by scientists could make moon travel a tad less expensive
The Moon just got a little cheaper to reach, and scientists are pretty excited about it.
earth photo taken from lunar orbit

It’s no secret that getting to the moon is expensive, and the fuel cost is one of the primary reasons. That’s why reducing it has been one of the primary objectives. Now it seems that scientists have found a way to reduce fuel costs by using a more economical route. 

A new study published in the journal Astrodynamics has mapped out a new route from Earth's orbit to the Moon's, one that could meaningfully reduce mission costs. The trick is a cosmic pit stop at a gravitational balance point sitting between the two bodies, called the L1 Lagrange point.

Read more