Dan,

I think this is really important and thank you for highlighting this.

Could you do rough sizing on what it would take to get something like this
out? What if we did this with a pre-load?

Carolynne -- I recommend you start reaching out to Kim as you re-formulate
your W0 strategy.

Lila

On Sat, Jan 31, 2015 at 2:36 AM, Florian Schmidt <
[email protected]> wrote:

> +1 for this idea. I still have an Android 2.3 device, but the Wikipedia
> app (and others too) is very slow and becomes more and more unusable, while
> it's agreat user experience on my Android 4.4 device.
>
> If dropping 2.3 support means a faster development of the main Wikipedia
> app and the <2.3 users still have access to Wikipedia through a lite app
> (which will be faster and more usable) i would say: do it, it has
> advantages for both sides :)
>
> Florian
>
> Gesendet mit meinem HTC
>
> ----- Reply message -----
> Von: "Dan Garry" <[email protected]>
> An: "mobile-l" <[email protected]>, "Carolynne Schloeder" <
> [email protected]>, "Toby Negrin" <[email protected]>, "Lila
> Tretikov" <[email protected]>
> Betreff: [WikimediaMobile] [Apps] Wikipedia Lite app?
> Datum: Sa., Jan. 31, 2015 06:45
>
> Hi everyone,
>
> Those of you who were at the Mobile quarterly review heard me mention
> Facebook Lite, an app that's designed especially for the developing world.
>
> Notably, their app has a lot of optimisations which make it good for users
> in developing world:
>
>    - It's only 252kB, good for limited data plans.
>    - It supports down to Android 2.2, good for older devices.
>    - It's data-efficient, good for 2G connections and for people on
>    limited data plans.
>
> From a development perspective, some advantages are:
>
>    - You no longer have to support older versions of Android in your main
>    app.
>    - You can tailor the performance of the lite app to the older devices
>    so it's faster.
>    - You can tailor the features of the lite app to the developing market.
>
> So obviously there are a lot of advantages for our users if we do this.
> And, selfishly, I can't stress enough how much dropping Android 2.3 from
> our current app would speed up development. As an example, almost all of
> the edge cases with lead images occurred on 2.3 devices, and they required
> quite a lot of investigation and hacking to fix them up. Obviously we've
> not dropped 2.3 so far because it's a very strategically important part of
> our user base, which I'm sure Carolynne can attest to!
>
> I'd say that we should put some serious thought into whether we'd prefer
> to have a Wikipedia Lite app for the developing world, rather than our
> current "one app to rule them all".
>
> Comments? Questions?
>
> Dan
>
> --
> Dan Garry
> Associate Product Manager, Mobile Apps
> Wikimedia Foundation
>
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