- From: Allison Varnell <allison1734@live.com>
- Date: Fri, 28 Aug 2020 13:57:20 +0000
- To: William Van Woensel <William.Van.Woensel@dal.ca>
- CC: Adam Sobieski <adamsobieski@hotmail.com>, "public-webapps@w3.org" <public-webapps@w3.org>, schema.org Mailing List <public-schemaorg@w3.org>, "semantic-web@w3.org" <semantic-web@w3.org>, "public-voter-decision-support@w3.org" <public-voter-decision-support@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <BN6PR19MB0100D3E2180F75FC16B276D6DF520@BN6PR19MB0100.namprd19.prod.outlook.com>
Adam, I think the bookmark idea is great. I think a “dashboard” GUI would enhance the UX as wel. Aside from having an appealing user interface and visuals, you could also use your main page view to share with others (via social media or in a presentation) or perhaps just documents sources one was doing research. I would think it would be easy to aggregate the data into a web page view (I.e. a script to create/maintain an updated HTML/md file. User’s could then choose to assign a public url (to share) or private one (only accessible with token). I think a dashboard with indexing and filters is vital for this to be done right. I like the idea of a dashboard view/bulletin board view with visuals and tags (think using thumbnails or favicons); this is a great way to make the data useable for end users. After all, If a user cannot access and understand their data easily, then it renders it useless (to them at least 😋). - Allison Varnell Sent from my iPhone On Aug 28, 2020, at 8:36 AM, William Van Woensel <William.Van.Woensel@dal.ca> wrote: Hi Adam, If I understood correctly, your idea would involve semantically annotated bookmarks – i.e., allowing external third-party annotation but also leveraging pre-existing “data islands” within the bookmarked pages. If this is accurate, using that particular search term (i.e., semantic bookmarking) already points towards some useful prior work. From a technical point of view, I’ve dabbled a bit in extracting structured data from annotated websites: checkout Any23<https://any23.apache.org/>, java-RDFa<https://github.com/shellac/java-rdfa> and JS RDFa<https://www.w3.org/2006/07/SWD/RDFa/impl/js/> (others could have emerged since). Kind regards, William From: Adam Sobieski <adamsobieski@hotmail.com> Sent: August-27-20 3:27 PM To: public-webapps@w3.org; schema.org Mailing List <public-schemaorg@w3.org>; semantic-web@w3.org; public-voter-decision-support@w3.org Subject: A Less Ephemeral Web CAUTION: The Sender of this email is not from within Dalhousie. Web users could press or click on a Web browser button to save, note or scrapbook webpages and/or Web-schema-annotated objects in them, storing them for later use. This storage could be organized into folders and Web schema could be of use for sorting webpages and/or objects into these folders. For example, a NewsArticle schema could indicate that, when saved, noted or scrapbooked, Web content could be organized into a folder called “News Articles”. Webpages and/or objects in them could be stored on users’ local devices or stored on cloud-based storage such as Microsoft OneDrive or Google Drive. This could be configurable for end users. Cloud-based storage and extensible architectures could facilitate the development of apps, plugins and services to analyze the contents of collections of stored webpages to provide features for end users. Some specific examples of analytical services in the news space include: (1) notifying users of the distribution of the sources of their collected articles, (2) notifying users whether their collected articles contain misinformation or disinformation, (3) notifying users whether their collected articles are “left-leaning” or “right-leaning”, (4) indicating to users the distribution of topics in their collected articles, (5) indicating to users sentiment analysis upon their collected articles, (6) indicating to users the comprehensiveness of their news search and gathering processes for a given topic, and (7) providing other features made possible by other AI and natural language processing tools. Multiple means of navigating collections of stored webpages and/or objects can be envisioned. Users could utilize a calendar-based widget to navigate collections of webpages or objects. Users could also navigate via a folders-based user experience. Multiple means of searching collections of stored webpages and/or objects can be envisioned, for example searching for content by text strings or keywords. Thank you. I hope that these ideas are of some interest to you. Best regards, Adam Sobieski
Received on Friday, 28 August 2020 13:57:39 UTC