- From: Robin Hanson <hanson@hss.caltech.edu>
- Date: 14 Sep 1995 00:58:30 GMT
- To: www-talk@w3.org
- Cc: hanson@hss.caltech.edu
The following feature should be easy to implement in a Web Broswer, and would be of great value to me and others I know, but I haven't seen any browser that does it: Given that I'm looking at a page (call it page1), I want to push just one button, and get a page which lists pages which reference page1. This would give me "backlinks", the ability to follow links backwards, rather than just in the usual forward direction. A simple implemementation would be for the browser to paste the URL of the current page into the query form of a web database that allows searches on URLs. For example, the Open Text Web Index has a "HyperLink" option in their PowerSearch form at: http://www.opentext.com:8080/omw-comp.html This wouldn't get me all backlinks, but it would be a big improvement. A simple variation would include the nearest anchor in the search, to just get links to that anchor. And of course it would be nice if the browser let users change the web database(s) used. Backlinks were a central feature of early "hypertext" visions. They would, for example, allow people to easily find criticism of pages. Imagine that people at the home page of the CIA, RJR Renolds, etc., or at some high-profile Op-Ed article, could find responding critiques with just one button push! This might have profound implications for public and commercial debate. We seem so close now - why aren't we there yet? If money is the problem, let's talk. Robin Hanson hanson@hss.caltech.edu http://www.hss.caltech.edu/~hanson/ 818-683-9153 2433 Oswego St., Pasadena, CA 91107 FAX: 818-405-9841 818-395-4093 Div. Hum. & Soc. Sci. 228-77 Caltech, Pasadena, CA 91125
Received on Thursday, 14 September 1995 14:44:34 UTC