Hindu Business page:

Emerging content discovery tools
Service Evernote will easily grab web content

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This edition of NetSpeak features a few tools that help us discover new content 
with ease.

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 anniversary edition of    Welcome to the 10th 

NetSpeak 

Yes, NetSpeak, started on Februrary 16, 2000, (http://www. 
hinduonnet.com/thehindu/2000/02/16/ stories/0616000b.htm), turns 10-years on 
February 16. It is heartening to note (from your letters) that NetSpeak has 
enriched the Web navigation experience of many netizens by keeping them abreast 
with the latest trends.

We take this opportunity to thank all our readers/well-wishers for their 
unstinted support/encouragement and hope they will continue to do the same. 
Enough rhetoric, now back to business. This edition of NetSpeak features a few 
tools that help us discover new content with ease.

Besides search engines, there are umpteen means to discover or stumble on new 
content. Domain specific blogs, relevant news feeds, specific discussion boards 
and tracking twitter content are some of them.

Among these tools, Twitter (http://twitter.com/jmurali) holds a unique position 
as it helps you discover real-time content. In fact, it is fast becoming the 
primary means to discover new content. But one shortcoming of twitter content 
is that unless you pick the tweet as soon as it arrives, it is more likely to 
be missed. If you follow several people this becomes all the more critical. So, 
the question boils down to this: how to bring some order into the ever-flowing 
stream of tweets and make them easily accessible? The service Feedera 
(http://feedera.com/) attempts to solve this Twitter content overload with good 
old e-mail technology. Once signed up with the service and linked it to your 
Twitter account, Feedera organises your Twitter content (under themes such as 
stories, photos and videos) and sends a digest via e-mail daily.
Glydo.com

While on a web page, if by some means we can automatically harness all the 
content related to the one being read, it will certainly boost our web 
navigation efficiency.

If this content harvesting mechanism works well, appropriate content will get 
pushed to us effortlessly. This is the context in which the tool Glydo ( 
http://www.glydo.com/), the free Firefox extension comes in.

Once installed, Glydo plants a few icons on the bottom of the browser and 
through these icons one can access the related content. When you are on a page, 
Glydo analyses its content, culls the content related to it from different Net 
sources and presents them under specific categories. The service offers related 
stories, tweets, videos and web pages and each of these can be accessed via the 
icons meant for it. Of course, the tool is not fully perfect and the content 
being displayed may not always be related to the current one.

Similarweb (http://www. similarweb.com/) is yet another Firefox extension that 
can be used to locate sites with similar themes. Once installed, it keeps an 
icon on the toolbar and by simply clicking on this icon one can obtain a list 
of web sites related to the one being viewed. This tool performs better if you 
are on a topic specific web page. For instance, if you are on the page Learners 
TV ( http://www.learnerstv.com/index. php), a site with educational videos, it 
is likely that you stumble on several relevant similar links via this tool.

Yet another tool worth a look for discovering sites similar to the one being 
read is the Firefox extension from ‘Similar sites’ (http://www. 
similarsites.com/).
TwitterBar

We have seen several means to post on to Twitter directly from the browser. The 
Firefox extension TwitterBar (https://addons 
.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/4664) is another one of this kind.

The advantage here is that it enables you to post the current web page link 
directly from the browser address-bar. Once installed, you will find a blue 
icon on the right-end of the Firefox address-bar.

To post the link on to Twitter, just click on this icon. While doing Net-based 
workshops this could come in handy as it helps you easily post the link to the 
workshop’s Twitter page.
Evernote

While doing research with the web, we come across lots of on-line materials and 
to access them with ease, we organise the materials into appropriate categories 
and keep them on-line.

A service that was heavily used for this purpose was Google Notebook (https:// 
www.google.com/notebook<http://www.google.com/notebook>). As mentioned in the 
past, Google has stopped its development and is no more available to new users. 
An on-line notebook service that is fast gaining popularity is Evernote.

This service allows you to easily grab web content and keep them as pages of a 
notebook. Depending on your requirements you can create any number of notebooks.

To make the notebook creation process easier, the service offers client 
software as well. In addition, Evernote provides extensions for Firefox and 
Chrome ( http://www.evernote.com/about/download/web_clipper.php).

Another advantage of Evernote is its Twitter integration that enables a Twitter 
user to send tweets to his/her Evernote account.

The steps to be followed to connect one’s Twitter account with Evernote, is 
outlined here: http://blog. evernote.com/2009/04/14/ evernote_twitter/.

J. MURALI He may be contacted at: [email protected]


Regards

"Perhaps our role on this planet is not to worship God-- but to create Him."

                                        --Arthur C. Clarke

(Rajesh Asudani)

Assistant General Manager,
Reserve Bank of India
Nagpur
09420397185
O: 0712 2806676
Res: 0712 2591349




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