OpenWetWare:ProjectDevelopment/Linking of OWW content: Difference between revisions
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====Challenge or opportunity the development project answers==== | ====Challenge or opportunity the development project answers==== | ||
Helps users | #Helps users to organize information | ||
#Helps users to develop networks and relationships among OWW content (i.e., from OpenWetWare to OpenNetWare) | |||
#Helps users to develop networks and relationships among OWW users (i.e., social networks & communities) | |||
====Examples of what could be done or how it would work==== | ====Examples of what could be done or how it would work==== |
Revision as of 12:10, 25 June 2008
Description
Create a mechanism on OWW that, at a first level, helps you to easily aggregate and organize content you’ve created or want to follow (i.e., a simple tool that makes it super easy to develop and organize links to pages within OWW) and, at a second level, allows you to link the content according to relationships that are meaningful to you. In other words, eventually create your personal semantic linking structure within OWW.
Challenge or opportunity the development project answers
- Helps users to organize information
- Helps users to develop networks and relationships among OWW content (i.e., from OpenWetWare to OpenNetWare)
- Helps users to develop networks and relationships among OWW users (i.e., social networks & communities)
Examples of what could be done or how it would work
- Click on the “track” icon to automatically add the page or the section of the page to your personal database.
- A three-dimensional map of your connections to content on OWW. Can be autogenerated based on parameters you enter into the “draw my connections” tool.
- Your tracked information could be arranged as 1-dimensional (a list of links), 2-dimensional (links + people and networks), and 3 dimensional displays (visual displays, like the “map of the market).
Why the project should happen now
Already, it is difficult to keep track of your own OWW content, let alone content of interest to you that is generated by others. As OWW grows, and as new tools get developed (e.g., Project Notebook) this problem becomes worse.
Who are the immediate customers?
People looking for teaching resources. People looking to find collaborators on OWW. Both groups could use this linking structure to link people with content.