TechNewsWorld reports on the creation of Scholarpedia, tagged the first "free peer-reviewed encyclopedia." Although it reports that "initial response may be, not another Wikipedia wannabe!...Scholarpedia could be very different." The article claims Scholarpedia "is not as elitist as Citizendium," but approval is still required. Each article has "a 'curator,' who approves all changes and ensures the article is an approved version."
Wikipedia was prominently mentioned as part of Time Magazine's annual Person of the Year Award. Time awarded the honor to "You" obstensibly the internet users which are creating content that is revolutionizing the dissemination and creation of information. Wikipedia was also cited as the source for the beginning of the World Wide Web. Many additional news outlets covered Time's award and wikipedia including The Boston Globe
Notes formation of Wikichix, http://wikichix.org/wiki/WikiChix), and claims it is in response to "how male-dominated Wikipedia has become." A related mailing list was briefly hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation, but is now hosted by .
Wikia announced a wikiesque search engine (Wikiasari) using venture capital from amazon.com and others "Essentially, if you consider one of the basic tasks of a search engine, it is to make a decision: "this page is good, this page sucks" [...] Computers are notoriously bad at making such judgments, so algorithmic search has to go about it in a roundabout way."
"The inquisitive founder of Wikipedia is working on his next project - a free internet education for everyone." Quotes Wales as saying, "Imagine a free college education for everyone anywhere in the world with all the resources that you could ever need online," he says. "The implications for the Third World are astounding."