4

images.jpegI received the following email from Rafael Ortega and thought it was interesting enough to reprint in full. Here we go:

It’s been suggested before that netbooks could be useful as e-readers while serving the many purposes of a portable computer of nowadays. I’m pursuing a degree in LIS at a south american university included in the THES universities ranking over the last few years, and I took a snapshot of an experiment of mine, wich consists in taking pictures to study materials with a Fujifilm A850 8.1 megapixel camera, applying OCR, converting to html and capturing with Firefox extension Scrapbook, for later annotation, highlighting, and link insertion.

The fact that the netbook I read this OCRed texts from is an Asus eeepc 701 with an embarrassing 7 inch screen (KDE enabled, CPU clocked to -LOL- 900Mhz), keeps me from revealing more details on this crearly unorthodox approach to reading. Yet I found reading from the screen not as uncomfortable as one would expect. Firefox extension Stylish allows for a change in background and fonts colour, and SmothWheel provides a way of fine tuning scrolling behaviour. I made some slight modifications to Scrapbook source code in order to assign more shortcut keys to numbers; some of those shortcuts turn selected text into Google searches (100 hits per page as default), Google “define” command, and Google translation from French to English. I also added a bit of code to allow me to insert hyperlinks to elements on the same document, thus providing me a way of creating cross references between different parts of a given text.

The fact that Scrapbook encloses highlighted text between tags with a certain class attribute, means that such content (as well as everything else inserted with the extension -links and comments-, wich bear their class attribute), could be displayed separately, exported or indexed by a information retrieval and storage system. I discarded Google Desktop search tool as it didn’t index more than a few pages of each document, but probably htdig (wich comes with stock Xandros Linux distro) will do better at indexing.

I’m thinking on migrating my rough and ready “system” as soon as I can get my hands on a web tablet with transflective screen (Pixel-Qi, Qualcomm Mirasol, you name it), and I may carry around the thing with a USB flexible rubber keyboard wrapped around that I would unroll and plug in. Exccentric, isn’t there a bit of method in my madness?
Shiyali

 
4