![]() |
RDF: Related Links and other such fun stuffWhat is it?The Mozilla browser has a feature called "Related Links" which is part of a set of features called "Smart Browsing".Imagine a "helper" who looked over your shoulder at what you were browsing and suggested other things you might want to look at. Some examples,
This is a fundamental tweak to the way the web works. Currently, when a user is looking at a web page, there is a simple bilateral relation between the user and that web site. With SmartBrowsing, we can now have trilateral relations with the opportunity for a set of third parties to contribute. Where to see itThe UI for this feature was implemented on mac and windows in the pre-NGLayout Mozilla browser. You can also see it in operation in Netscape Navigator 4.07 or 4.5+, and read more about Netscape's What's Related services on the Netcenter site. Post-NGLayout, this feature is not yet fully implemented. In the older v5 browser go to the View menu and select "Show Navigation Center". Go to some page like www.whitehouse.gov. Select the 4th button on the Aurora selector (SiteTools). You will see a folder called "Related Links". Open it to get a list of recommendations of what to look at in the context of www.whitehouse.gov. If you leave the folder open, it will keep getting refreshed as you surf around. How it worksYou will be able to configure any number of "Smart Browsing Providers". Pre-NGLayout, this could be set by looking under the "Navigator Internals" section of Aurora (6th button on the selector) for a folder called "Smart Browsing Providers" (SBP). Each SBP is really just a url. For example, the Related Items SBP is http://www-rl1.netscape.com/wtgn? When you go to http://www.baz.com/foo, the contents --- in RDF --- of http://www-rl1.netscape.com/wtgn?www.baz.com/foo are fetched and displayed.More details on request ... Last Updated: $Id: SmartBrowsing.html,v 1.2 1999/03/18 09:07:54 daniel.brickley%bristol.ac.uk Exp $ |
|
|
Copyright © 1998-2000 The Mozilla Organization.
Last modified March 18, 1999. |
|