Re: [Air-l] visualizing weblinks
In a quick reply to Steve and Sean's helpful hints and Bob's question: An MA student I'm helping is researching feminist websites. As part of her methodology she has operationalized the number of links on a website connecting to other sites of the network she's identified. I figured it would be helpful to be able to visualize the links between various websites, as she's found that some websites link a lot and get linked to a lot, some less and others get linked to and don't link out (etc.). That way a more substantial conclusion could (probably) be gotten from linking the content based analysis of the sites to the more technical aspects of the sites. So, what the program should do in this case, is not to map the whole of _one_ site, but the links out (and preferably in again) of one site and its more or less immediate neighbors in the network. That's why I said the program would need to accept an URL (since it's other people's sites she's researching) and a number of hops (from that URL to its neighbors and hopefully back again too) so that the 'relative' location and connectedness of this site could be examined. The program would thus, as Bob suggests, need a spider/crawler function. BTW, hints on related literature would be appreciated :) A few quick comments on the programs:
Internet Cartographer http://www.inventix.com/
Interesting, but works with your browser history, creating a visualization of links between the sites you've visited. I haven't tried it out, but it appears not to have an auto-crawler function.
Astra SiteManager http://tryandbuy.mercuryinteractive.com/cgi-bin/portal/trynbuy/asm.jsp?pro d=8023
Strange. This URL several times didn't work, telling me my session had timed out, but just now it opened without a hitch. This Astra Sitemanager again seems to be geared towards examining one's own website, not 'researching' someone elses.
Site Manager http://www.sgi.com/software/sitemgr.html
Looks interesting, but seems geared toward one's own website, besides, I don't have a box running Irix 6.2.
Somehow I missed that page in the first round I trawled through Cybergeography's pages... There's an interesting program there, called WebTracer, but it's really nasty trying to run it... I guess it's not called Beta for naught. If you want to give it a try, save all your work, close all other programs. For me, it wouldn't run with the 3D device set to D3D HAL (I _do_ have DirectX 7 installed), but it ran when I set it to RGB emulation. Even with the maximum number of pages set to 100, it'll need some time to run... The program will 'eat your mouse pointer', meaning that while it runs, you can't move the mouse pointer out of its window. The only way to regain control over your computer is to either click on the "Show Page" button in the screen, which will bring up your browser and positions your mouse pointer in it, which allows you to move to the close-button of the screen and kill the program (it unceremoniously dies with an application error). Or you use ctrl+alt+del to bring up the taskmanager (providing you're running NT/2000/XP) and using the keyboard you kill the process. With these precautions, it's a pretty nifty thing to see it put itself through its paces.
Again, these programs don't do what WebTracer and Web Stalker do, they rather run on the stuff you have in your Favorites/Bookmarks.
I'd also recommend I/O/D's Web Stalker at http://www.backspace.org/iod/
This one's pretty cool as well, runs just fine, but besides generating a (quickly becoming cluttered) image, it doesn't seem to do much else. No zooming in or repositioning your point of view in order to examine a certain set of links/sites.
R Rogers, ed., 2000, Preferred Placement - Knowledge Politics on the Web, Maastricht: Jan van Eyck. (Martin Dodge has a piece in this as well.)
R Rogers and N Marres, "Landscaping Climate Change: A mapping technique for understanding science and technology debates on the World Wide Web," Public Understanding of Science, April 2000, http://www.iop.org/Journals/pu
I'll pass it on :)
I hope that helps.
I hope so too :) Cheers, Frank. -- The Cyberculture, Identity and Gender Resources ==> http://fragment.nl/resources/
2002 International Symposium on Technology and Society (ISTAS'02) Social Implications of Information and Communication Technology Raleigh, North Carolina, USA June 6-8, 2002 The goal of ISTAS'02 is to bring together Information and Communication Technology (ICT) professionals, computer science and engineering educators, teachers and scholars in the humanities and social sciences, policymakers, students, and ICT users for the purpose of establishing critical dialogue on the social and ethical dimensions of ICT. Call For Papers We encourage contributions for topics related to the conference theme: Electronic publishing ICT and democratic processes Intellectual property rights in the digital era Universal access/Digital divide Social implications of wireless technology Gender issues in ICT Equitable access for the disadvantaged and the disabled Misuse of ICT National and international ICT policy Distance education Web-based resources for teaching ethics in computing Information security and privacy Free speech and censorship ICT and high-risk systems Social implications of electronic commerce ICT and developing countries We also welcome papers in additional general areas of interest to the members of SSIT: environmental, health, safety, and peace-related implications of technology; social, economic, and ethical issues involving energy, information, and telecommunications technologies; history of technology; systems analysis in public policy decisions; and research methods for technology-policy analysis. Submit a one page abstract for a paper, or a proposal for a paper session or panel discussion to the Conference Chair (email preferred): Joseph R. Herkert Division of Multidisciplinary Studies Box 7107, North Carolina State University Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7107 voice: 919-515-7993 fax: 919-515-1828 email: joe_herkert@ncsu.edu
participants (2)
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Frank Schaap -
jeremy hunsinger