Header Ziff Davis Enterprise
Advertisement
Advertisement
Wednesday, June 27, 2007 12:47 PM/EST

Organized Web Surfing

Click the image to see the slide showBlueOrganizer
Smarter is good right? Everyone wants to do things smarter. That's why so many products and techniques are typically pitched with the line " 'blank' smarter!"


Well what about using the web? Is it possible to "browser smarter"?


That's the pitch behind a free Firefox extension called BlueOrganizer, which is provided by a company called AdaptiveBlue. Once added to a Firefox installation, BlueOrganizer adds a button to the toolbar as well as additional right menu options that make it possible to find links and information related to the content you are viewing.


Where the real power of BlueOrganizer comes through is in very specific types of essentially shopping content. For example, when I viewed a CD on Amazon or a movie on Netflix, the related links and information that BlueOrganizer provided pointed to reviews, Wikipedia entries, music web sites, and even YouTube videos.


On more general sites and blogs, the information provided by BlueOrganizer was still useful though not as focused as when on a site like Amazon. The main way that the technology in BlueOrganizer works is by using the standard APIs that sites like Amazon open up to developers. Using this BlueOrganizer is able to tell quite a bit about content being viewed.


Another feature of BlueOrganizer are BlueMarks, which are basically supercharged bookmarks that include all of the additional information about sites that you regularly visit. Users can manually define a site as a BlueMark or enable the Auto BlueMark feature which looks at browsing habits to automatically add sites to a user's BlueMarks.


Related to BlueMarks are Smart Links. Any site or content marked with BlueOrganizer can be saved as a Smart Link which can be embedded in any blog or website.


To add a Smart Link I simply chose it from the BlueOrganizer menu, which popped up a window and automatically generated the necessary code. The first time a Smart Link is used on a site a small snippet of code must be added to the header of the site template.


When Smart Links are added to a blog post or site, users can click on them to get a pop-up with essentially much of the same rich related information that BlueOrganizer provides. However, this information is made available to any visitor, even those without the BlueOrganizer extension or those not using Firefox, such as Internet Explorer users.


In order to use BlueOrganizer, users must register and create a user name and login. By default AdaptiveBlue periodically uploads anonymous usage information though during installation users can opt out of this for greater privacy.

TrackBack

TrackBack

http://etech.eweek.com/cgi-bin/mte/mt-tb.cgi/11220

Comments (4)

Nice write up, Jim and cool screenshots.

Based on your feedback we have moved the SmartMenu to the bottom of Firefox menu. This update is now available from AdaptiveBlue.com if you reinstall.

Thanks for your time and please email me with more suggestions on how to make the product better.

Alex

Jim Rapoza :

Hi Alex, yep I noticed that when doing follow up testing, that's why I didn't mention that in the review.
Helps a lot for those of us who use the right menu a lot to open links in new tabs.

John :

Thank you for the nice post.

Interesting.

I am an e commerce manager for Lehman's (http://www.lehmans.com) in Ohio. I would be interested to see how something like this takes off and how a site can do what Amazon did, open itself up to this technology. This is the first research that I have done into this, haven't even loaded the plug in yet.

Post a Comment

 
 



Most Recent Blogs

Emerging Technology
SEARCH
Google Labs
Testing Out Google Labs 
Review: Several new and interesting projects have been added to Google Labs.

WEB TECHNOLOGY
Firefox
Firefox 3: The Next-Gen Web Browser 
Review: Firefox 3 has new capabilities that will change the way that the Web is used.

Advertisement
Advertisement