Building a Graphical Web History Using Tcl/Tk (original) (raw)
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We have implemented a task and session based visual web history tool called Browsing Icons that dynamically draws animated graphs of the user's paths through the web. Using a proxy, it can be attached to any common web browser. Every web session builds an ...
Overview of Visualization Tools for Web Browser History Data
Nowadays, the Web has become one of the most widespread platforms for information change and retrieval. As it becomes easier to publish documents, as the number of users, and thus publishers, increases and as the number of documents grows, searching for information is turning into a cumbersome and time-consuming operation. Because of the loose interconnection between documents, people have difficulty remembering where they have been and returning to previously visited pages. Navigation through the web faces problems of locating oneself with respect to space and time. The idea of graphical assistance navigation is to help users to find their paths in hyperspace by adapting the style of link presentation to the goals, knowledge and other characteristics of an individual user. We first introduce the concepts related to web navigation; we then present an overview of different graphical navigation tools and techniques. We conclude by presenting a comparative table of these tools based on...
Web History Tools and Revisitation Support: A Survey of Existing Approaches and Directions
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Millions of web pages are visited, and revisited every day. On average, every second page loaded was already visited before by the same user-individual means for recurrence rates range between 20% and 72% (cf. p. 24). People revisit pages within a session or between parallel ones, they reuse web-based tools habitually, monitor specific content or resume interrupted sessions, and they want to re-find content after longer periods of time. Current history tools that support such revisits show unique and severe shortcomings. Often, revisits are cumbersome, more than necessary. This survey summarizes existing knowledge about revisitations on the web, and surveys the potential of graphic-based web history tools. A taxonomy of revisit-types distinguishes between short-, medium-, and long-term revisits, but also intra-and inter-session revisits. Assisted by a clear nomenclature this provides more clarity to the current discussion. The potential use of graphic-based tools is analyzed and discussed with respect to the found categories. The value of the current, mainly ix
Personal Web Library: Organizing and Visualizing Web Browsing History
International Journal of Web Information Systems, 2018
Purpose Modern Web browsers all provide a history function that allows users to see a list of URLs they have visited in chronological order. The history log contains rich information but is seldom used because of the tedious nature of scrolling through long lists. This paper aims to propose a new way to improve users’ Web browsing experience by analyzing, clustering and visualizing their browsing history. Design/methodology/approach The authors developed a system called Personal Web Library to help users develop awareness of and understand their Web browsing patterns, identify their topics of interest and retrieve previously visited Web pages more easily. Findings User testing showed that this system is usable and attractive. It found that users can easily see patterns and trends at different time granularities, recall pages from the past and understand the local context of a browsing session. Its flexibility provides users with much more information than the traditional history fun...
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2008
Currently, users generally do not have much temporal support when browsing Web pages. The Web is in fact a transitive collection where little effort is made for enabling access to historical content of pages. However, integrating documents with their histories should bring many benefits such as facilitated judgment of documents' trustworthiness or time travel. In this paper we present several interaction methods that users could have with page histories. We also demonstrate example systems designed for realizing these interaction types and discuss related issues.
Contextual web history: using visual and contextual cues to improve web browser history
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Abstract While most modern web browsers offer history functionality, few people use it to revisit previously viewed web pages. In this paper, we present the design and evaluation of Contextual Web History (CWH), a novel browser history implementation which improves the visibility of the history feature and helps people find previously visited web pages. We present the results of a formative user study to understand what factors helped people in finding past web pages.
Smart Innovation, Systems and Technologies, 2017
In all the modern browsers, maintaining user's web history is one of the primary tasks. Browser history will help to summarize the activity of the user during a certain period. However, current browser history is not so efficient to visualize in a user-friendly manner and also doesn't provide enough information for personalized recommendations. One of the key reason is that browsers never maintain any inter-connection between history items. Overall history is main‐ tained in a linear fashion with no information about how the user reached to a particular state. Another issue is that it is not possible to calculate how much time the user spent on any particular website using current history system. This paper provides a conceptual idea of solving these issues by providing a framework that solves this issue by introducing linked data and also describes how this can benefit in improving user experience and quality of recommendations.
Semantic History Map: Graphs Aiding Web Revisitation Support
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Abstract We present a novel approach intended to reduce user effort required to retrieve and/or revisit previously discovered information by exploiting web search and navigation history. In our approach, we collect streams of user actions during search and navigation sessions, identify individual user goals and construct and persistently store visual trees representing session history.