What is dailypedia?

The wiki rabbit hole, reimagined

Six million Wikipedia articles. One, chosen for you each day.

No feed, no noise. Just one article a day, tuned to what you can’t help being curious about. Never get lost down the , and never rush. Every door it opens stays halfway open, to meet again one day.

Download on theApp StoreGet it onGoogle Play
Download free · iOS 16+ and Android 11+
one of millionstoday’s read
01 How it works

How your daily discovery gets personal.

dailypedia learns the shape of your curiosity, then opens one article each morning that’s only yours. Read it, like it or skip it, and tomorrow’s pick knows you a little better.

STEP 01

Tell it what you wonder about

In a quiet couple of minutes, you pick the worlds you’re drawn to. Fine-tune by the topics within them, if you like.

STEP 02

It maps your curiosity

Those picks become a private map of what could pull you in, hundreds of small signals across dozens of topics. A first sense of you, before you’ve read a word.

STEP 03

One arrives, each morning

One entry, chosen for you and ready for a calm read. No links to follow, nothing else to disturb you. When you’re done, you’re done, and what you thought of it sharpens tomorrow’s pick.

18
worlds
64
topics
300+
deep-signals
~1M
calculations per pick
1
article, today

In time, no two readers drift the same way.

Two people can start from the very same worlds. Read a while, and your daily article becomes something that’s yours alone.

02 Daily recommendation

What waits behind today’s door.

Night Watch

Alchemy

Alchemy was an ancient art that chased three impossible dreams: turning lead into gold, brewing an elixir of immortality, and finding a single cure for every disease. Practised from China to the Muslim world to medieval Europe, its adepts guarded their work in cyphers and cryptic symbols — and in the guarding, invented real laboratory craft that became the seed of modern chemistry. Even Isaac Newton, in private, spent years an alchemist.

Chosen becauseoccult
03 Why dailypedia

The feed asks for all of your time and almost none of your attention. A rabbit hole asks the opposite. dailypedia rebuilds the second one:
one personal door a day.

A new door, not a feed

One entry a day, with a beginning and an end. The rare app that hopes it stays with you after you close it, then leaves you alone.

Truly yours, and it learns

No trending bar, no algorithm chasing the crowd. Just the article your own curiosity points to, and it becomes more you each day.

Made to be read

Every entry is typeset like a page from a fine almanac: real typography, generous space, and nothing flashing for your attention.

04 A note from the founder

The daily read I wished existed.

In the mid-2010s, a friend showed me IFTTT, a little automation app. Then one day an applet there caught my attention: it emails you a random Wikipedia article every morning. I loved the idea. But then I felt something was missing. It didn’t quite speak to my curiosity, because it just didn’t know me.

The Wikipedia I loved was the kind I fell into myself, hopping from one link to the next, endless exploration driven by my own curiosity rather than a random pick. I later learned it was called the wiki rabbit hole. That was the good part. The bad part was the time: ten minutes easily turned into hours. And these days, I don’t feel like I have as much of it to spare.

So I built dailypedia, to put the two together. One article a day, driven by your curiosity, with no drowning to steal your hours. You read it and you’re done. It’s the daily read I wished existed.

05 Questions

A few quiet answers.

Everything you might reasonably wonder before you download.

What happens after I finish today’s article?
Nothing here is built to keep you in the app. You read the one article, and you’re done. No feed to scroll, nothing pushing you to come back. The rabbit hole here happens a day at a time: tomorrow brings the next one, chosen for you.
What does it cost?
It’s free today, and reading your daily article will always stay free. We haven’t settled how dailypedia will fund itself yet, and that may bring optional extras down the line. But whatever we land on, you’ll never have to pay to read it.
Is what I’m curious about kept private?
Yes. Your curiosity profile is used only to choose your daily read. What we keep, and how to delete it, lives on our privacy page.
How does it learn what I’m curious about?
During a short setup you choose the worlds you’re drawn to, and can refine that with specific topics if you like. From those picks dailypedia builds a private picture of your curiosity, then quietly sharpens it from your feedback and small signals in what you read.
Do I have to read every day?
No. Read whenever you feel like it. Every daily pick stays in your history, so nothing is lost. But if you’re away for about two weeks straight, dailypedia stops choosing new articles. Come back any day and pick your journey up right where you left off. Your history and curiosity profile stay exactly as they were, ready to continue, until you decide to delete them.
Where do the entries come from?
Every one comes straight from Wikipedia: the encyclopedia that millions of volunteers have built, edit by edit, into the largest open record of human knowledge we’ve ever had. dailypedia doesn’t rewrite it; it chooses from it. It’s shared under CC BY-SA, and we’re just grateful to stand on it.
Which languages can I read in?
Reading is available in seven languages: English, Español, Deutsch, Français, Italiano, Português and Türkçe.

Your next daily read is one tap away.

Get dailypedia now, and let a new wiki article, chosen just for you, find you each morning. With a calm read, ease your doors of curiosity open again.

Download on theApp StoreGet it onGoogle Play
Download free · iOS 16+ and Android 11+