Dnia czwartek, 2 stycznia 2014 13:04:17 Sean Lynch pisze: > On Wed, Jan 1, 2014 at 3:46 PM, James A. Donald <[email protected]> wrote: > > As a matter of fact, it still does work. > > It works far less, though, since most people expect others to rely on > search engines, so they don't bother to link anymore. > > Here's a thought: browser extension that stores your "personal" web index, > and gives you a typeahead menu when you write about concepts in your index, > prompting you to convert phrases to links. Like the way Facebook always > wants to convert the names of people and pages to tags. Even if it were > just primed with Wikipedia, that would drastically reduce the amount of > Google searching people need to do when reading stuff you write.
In Firefox it's called "The Awesome Bar", and it sifts through your history and bookmarks (I bookmark a lot, and tag these pretty exactly, which helps immensely). The downside, of course, is that it works only for links that I have already visited. So here's the idea: sharing bookmark tags and links with each other, via some extention for example, and making "The Awesome Bar" (damn, I hate that name) sift through bookmarks/tags of people in your "network" (what that means would have to be defined, but as Mozilla Sync can already store bookmarks, the data can already be on a server, just use it). -- Pozdr rysiek
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