The world's knowledge. By voice.
The Thing searches Wikipedia's 60 million articles to answer your questions with accurate, sourced information. Get summaries, deep dives, and facts on any topic — all through natural conversation.
"Who invented the telephone?" "What's the population of Tokyo?" "Tell me about the French Revolution." The Thing searches Wikipedia and gives you a clear, concise answer — sourced from the world's largest encyclopaedia. No browsing, no scrolling, just the answer.
Wikipedia articles can be thousands of words long. The Thing reads them for you and delivers the key points. "Summarise the article on quantum computing." "Give me the highlights of the Battle of Waterloo." Deep knowledge, distilled.
Curiosity doesn't stop at one answer. Ask follow-ups naturally. "When was that?" "Who else was involved?" "What happened next?" The Thing maintains context across your questions so the conversation flows like talking to an expert.
Wikipedia exists in over 300 languages. The Thing can search and translate articles from any edition. "What does the Japanese Wikipedia say about sushi?" "Find the Italian article on Leonardo da Vinci." Knowledge without language barriers.
Visiting a new city? The Thing can pull up Wikipedia articles about landmarks you're near. Watching a documentary? Ask about the people and events mentioned. Contextual knowledge that connects to what you're doing right now.
Ask any question — The Thing automatically searches Wikipedia when relevant.
Get clear, sourced answers with the key information highlighted.
Ask follow-ups naturally. The Thing keeps context across the conversation.
Your curiosity is private.
Wikipedia queries are processed in real-time and not stored on our servers.
No search history is maintained. Each question is independent and private.
Wikipedia content is publicly available — no authentication or personal data is required.
Your learning interests and question patterns are never profiled, tracked, or shared.