I was trying all of my search techniques today trying to find documentation on programs or interfaces to the history kept by your browser as you surf the internet. I suddenly had the idea that it would be interesting to analyze my own surfing habits to discover which sites I had checked during the last day, week, or month. I thought it would be easy to write up a script that took the history files and converted them into XML or some other manipulable format. Then I could design different interfaces to the data to display histograms or connection graphs on the internet.
What I found on the net were a lot of history visualization projects that were written as plugins for Mosaic in 1995 or 1996 and never been updated since then or ported over to the latest browsers. So we are left with the same simple lists of previously visited sites we had 8 years ago. Why was it so difficult for those projects to succeed and would they do any better today?
I've tried some of the visual browsers and my reaction to them has been lukewarm. Seeing the connections of links from a site soon becomes useless because the tree grows so fast. Follow any of the links to a reasonably dense news source and it takes the visual browser minutes to download and display the new tree of links. I'm more interested in the site than waiting a minute to see a graph of where I've been, by the time the graph is complete I'm surfing onto another link.
Nonetheless I'm still convinced that the browser history could be used more effectively. My idea now is to use it to make my community of practice or interest visible to others in a similar way to Jon Udell has been making the list of his RSS subscriptions visible. Visibility leads to more community building. It's a way for me to show you what I'm interested in and what was too uninteresting to merit a mention here.
2:53:14 AM
|