Showing posts with label bookmarklets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bookmarklets. Show all posts

Friday, 20 June 2008

Clipmarks and more on Twine

Below is an extract from an article from Hrafn Thorri Thorisson’s blog at Think Artifical about Twine. I thought I would add this as it gives a great description of bookmarklets, which adds to what I had already written. If you want to have a look at the full article, which covers the entire Twine service, click here.

In posting this extract I have tried using another new tool I came across called Clipmarks This plug in allows you to extract parts of a web page and then post them to your blog, add them to another web page or e-mail the extract to colleagues. It is an excellent tool for providing the right amount of information without having to send the entire link or article. With the tool you can extract videos and pictures as well as text.

It is very easy to use, however I have had a couple of issues in posting this article to my blog. Firstly I somehow managed to delete my comments whilst looking at the preview and in posting comments you can not use HTML, which is a shame as I initially had to add in URL’s for the above links rather than embed them in the text, which makes things a bit messy (this can be amended following the initial post of the blog in your standard blog editor). Also, once you get to the posting to blog page, there appears to be no way to adjust the information you have selected, you seem to have to start all over again if you change your mind on what should be posted.

Having said that, I still think this is a very useful tool and I am sure I will use it to e-mail colleagues parts of sites without having to add in the whole thing.

Bookmarklet Example

If you’ve ever used an online bookmarking service you’re familiar with adding a link to your browsers toolbar, and then clicking it to bookmark the page you’re on for easy access online later. It’s the same concept here, except when you click the bookmarking link the pretty window below appears at the corner of your browser window.

Twine Bookmarklet Example
The “Add to”, “Title” and “Summary” fields are shown truncated.
They auto-expand when clicked
None of the information you see above was entered by hand. The summary contains the text specified in the article metadata generated by Wordpress, the same regarding tags & title — plus Twine generates a thumbnail of the page.

So things are auto-extracted; with the option of adding or modifying them manually (you can manually select a pic from the page if you want). All we need to do is click save.


blog it

Tuesday, 27 May 2008

Online Communities

I have to say that trying to keep a blog going is not the easiest thing in the world. There is so much information that is currently sitting out on the internet, I fell like I am just duplicating what is there. But I guess the purpose of a blog is to describe things from your own personal point of view and if others find that interesting or helpful, then it is useful. I do think that the more I post probably the easier this will become and I hope that my style of writing will develop as well!
One such site that was recommended to me a while back by a colleague is Twine. Twine is a tool that in their own words "helps you organize, share and discover information around your interests, with networks of like-minded people." As someone relatively new to the semantic workplace and the online community in general, I have found it difficult to get involved and have sometimes wondered at people who rave about online communities.

Anyway, I thought that Twine might be a good place to start. So what does Twine bring to the table? Firstly you can subscribe to groups of interest. People have set up discussions about an inordinate number of subjects ranging from sports and celebrities to internet technologies. I have joined a number of groups that discuss the semantic web, ontologies etc. In subscribing to these groups, I get sent an e-mail on a daily basis that shows me what new comments and links have been added to my twines within these groups. There is an ocean of knowledge out there both in published web pages and from the people that contribute to these groups on a regular basis and I am learning an awful lot. That said, I don’t always find the time to read all of the links that get sent to my daily digest of news, which can be frustrating. Also some of the articles are very technical or concern a particular technology that I have never heard of, rendering the article less than helpful for a novice such as myself.
Secondly I did think that being a member of twine would help me get to know more people within my world of Information Management, but usually people don't invite you to link with them. You have to ask them to link with you. It's an online version of going to conferences. You can stand in the corner and observe and listen in to others' conversations or you can get stuck in and introduce yourself to others. My own personal tendencies mean I steer towards the anonymous observer, but I do think that you get out what you put in and the more you get involved the more the community will become an invaluable tool. So that is my own personal challenge at the moment, to get more involved.

As well as being a community and a repository for information from others, it is a place where you can add your own information. You can either add bookmarks (or Bookmarklets as Twine refers to them) to your “My Items” section for yourself only or you can bookmark web pages that you would like to add to Twines for others to view. The one big advantage of using Twine for this is that it automatically tags the pages you add, which increases the value of that information. I must confess that I have not explored this functionality fully yet, but will hopefully do so in the near future.

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