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Page Title
Using Memex to archive and mine \\community Web browsing experience
Stripped Text Content
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"Using Memex to archive and mine community Web browsing experience
Soumen Chakrabarti, soumen@cse.iitb.ernet.in
Sandeep Srivastava, sandy@cse.iitb.ernet.in
Mallela Subramanyam, manyam@cse.iitb.ernet.in
Mitul Tiwari, mits@cse.iitb.ernet.in
Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
Abstract
Keyword indices, topic directories, and link-based rankings are used
to search and structure the rapidly growing Web today. Surprisingly
little use is made of years of browsing experience of millions of
people. Indeed, this information is routinely discarded by browsers.
Even deliberate bookmarks are stored passively, in browser-dependent
formats; this separates them from the dominant world of HTML
hypermedia, even if their owners were willing to share them. All this
goes against Vannevar Bush's dream of the Memex : an enhanced
supplement to personal and community memory.
We present the beginnings of a Memex for the Web. Memex blurs the
artificial distinction between browsing history and deliberate
bookmarks. The resulting glut of data is analyzed in a number of
ways. It is indexed not only by keywords but also according to the
user's view of topics ; this lets the user recall topic-based
browsing contexts by asking questions like ``What trails was I
following when I was last surfing about classical music ?'' and
``What are some popular pages related to my recent trail regarding
cycling ?'' Memex is a browser assistant that performs these
functions.
We envisage that Memex will be shared by a
community of surfers with overlapping interests; in that context, the
meaning and ramifications of topical trails may be decided by not one
but many surfers. We present a novel formulation of the
community taxonomy synthesis problem , algorithms, and
experimental results. We also recommend uniform APIs which will help
managing advanced interactions with the browser.
1. Introduction
What are the basic sources of information availa"
....
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