Webaroo
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Webaroo is a technology startup company having its offices in the U.S. (Bellevue and Santa Clara) and India (Mumbai and Delhi). It has been founded by a group of seasoned entrepreneurs -- Rakesh Mathur, Bradley Husick, and Beerud Seth.
The company is currently building a software that will enable users to search and browse web pages without an Internet connection. Its use is especially targeted towards laptops and mobile devices. The company released a beta version of their software in the second week of April 2006 for use to the general public.
As of now, 4th September, 2006, Webaroo is offering free download of the proprietary Webaroo v1.2 and is still in the beta mode.
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[edit] Overview
Webaroo is freely available for download on its website. The software needs to be first downloaded and installed on a laptop or a desktop and subsequently can be installed on a mobile device. Before you can start using Webaroo, web content needs to be downloaded from the Internet. This content could be web sites or web packs created by Webaroo.
[edit] Web Packs
Webaroo has created web packs based on a particular topic. Web packs are a collection of web pages that are compressed and indexed into one unit. This is useful to search a variety of content on a particular topic without the need of downloading individual web sites. Web packs are available in many sizes. There are mini packs in the range of 5-20 MB based on categories like news, entertainment, people, places, health, technology, reference and Wikipedia slices. In addition a 6 GB web pack of the entire Wikipedia is also available for download.
[edit] Webaroo on Mobile Device
Webaroo is designed to search and browse web pages on a mobile device. Web packs and web sites downloaded in the Webaroo library on a laptop or desktop can be synced to the mobile device.
Currently Webaroo can be installed only on Pocket PCs and Pocket PC phones running Windows Mobile 2003 SE and Windows Mobile 5.0.
[edit] External Links & References
- Official site
- Webaroo Wikipedia - PC Review
- Hold the web in the palm of your hand - The Guardian