AnnotateIt and Annotator: a new mode of communication on the web

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-08-20

Summary:

“For some time, we at the Open Knowledge Foundation have been working on a project to allow you to annotate the web. All of it. We’re now happy to announce two major releases: of Annotator, the code that makes web annotation possible, and AnnotateIt, a web service providing storage for your annotations... There’s an Annotator ‘bookmarklet‘ — like the one used by Pinterest and many other web applications — which allows you to create annotations on any web page simply by selecting content with your mouse. This will work no matter where on the web you are; whether you’re reading a Shakespeare play, a news article, or a Wikipedia page. These annotations usually contain simple text content, but in principle they can contain any kind of data you like. There are already a number of plugins that store extra data on the annotations such as tags or details of who created them, but you could include links to other web pages, videos, or audio content. All the annotations you make can be saved to a central service for long-term storage. You can find a demo of the Annotator software on the Annotator website. In addition to the plugins we administer, others have added support for touch devices, storage in your browser, and heatmaps allowing you to see where a document is most heavily annotated. That’s all well and good, but how can you actually use this thing? That’s what AnnotateIt is for. AnnotateIt provides ‘annotation as a service,’ and serves as the long-term storage we mentioned in the previous paragraphs. In the next 30 seconds, you can get up and running with Annotator in your browser by following a few simple steps: [1] Sign up to AnnotateIt. [2] Go to ‘My Account’ and drag the bookmarklet to your browser’s bookmarks bar. [3] That’s it, you’re done: you can use the bookmarklet anywhere on the web. All the annotations you make anywhere on the web will be saved to AnnotateIt and you’ll be able to review and organise them on http://annotateit.org. You can make public annotations for all the world to see, or you can keep your annotations private: it’s up to you. AnnotateIt is also designed for people who run websites with content that could do with annotating. Open Shakespeare is one of our projects that uses AnnotateIt as a storage server, while presenting annotation as a fully integrated service. If you develop such a website, you might be interested to know that integration with AnnotateIt takes just a few lines of code: see our website for details. Annotations now have an online presence, and when you create annotations with the AnnotateIt bookmarklet they display a link you can share with friends on Twitter, Facebook, etc. You can even embed Annotations directly in a web page ... We’ve made several tweaks to Annotator’s user interface to improve its usability, particularly when annotation is enabled for only a small part of a larger page... Developers can now make their site annotatable with just one line of Javascript... We’ve been involved with the Open Annotation Collaboration‘s work to standardise the world of online annotation, and in the future we hope we’ll be making Annotator into the first real-world implementation of the OAC specification... Hypothes.is are working with us on their project to bring citizen-powered peer review to the web... FinalsClub are porting some 9000 high-quality annotations of Shakespeare plays over to Annotator’s format so they can be displayed on Open Shakespeare... What’s left to do... The ability to Annotate not only web pages, but multimedia content within those pages like images and video. We hope we’ll be working with the authors of yuma.min.js to make that happen... The Changing Content Problem. At the moment, Annotator doesn’t behave particularly cleverly when the content it’s annotating changes. In the most general case, this is a really tough problem to solve when you don’t control the content, but lots of smart people (see the Memento project) are working on it..."

Link:

http://blog.okfn.org/2012/04/03/annotateit-and-annotator/

Updated:

08/16/2012, 06:08

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.data oa.crowd oa.standards oa.social_media oa.twitter oa.tools oa.audio oa.floss oa.wikipedia oa.okfn oa.images oa.facebook oa.apps oa.pinterest oa.memento_project oa.yuma.min.js oa.finals_club oa.hypothes.is oa.open_shakespeare oa.bookmarklet oa.plugins oa.annotateit oa.annotator oa.video oa.announcements

Authors:

abernard

Date tagged:

08/20/2012, 18:30

Date published:

04/05/2012, 16:22