IBM ANNOUNCED a software tool today that helps users selectively capture and share their browsing activity for web-based tasks.
The tool records web browsing activity and logs the data. Users can review information and convert sequences of the "action shots" into scripts that can be shared with other users online. According to IBM, passwords aren't recorded, and users can turn off the recording mode and delete session actions so data is protected.
The technology is based on IBM's Coscripter, a research project designed to simplify web-based tasks and share records of complex activities. IBM claims its Coscripter application lets people record in the background and selectively publish logs of activity to other people.
Suggested applications include registering for a conference, making travel arrangements, sharing knowledge about how to submit a budget for a conference and showing colleagues how to gather and analyse certain data sets.
IBM couldn't pass up a nod to social networking integration, apparently, so people can also record information about their interactions with Facebook and Twitter and publish that on blogs.
IBM Fellow and director Laura Haas said, "CoScripter Reusable History not only helps you remember what you have done on the web previously and share those steps with people in your networks; users can also tap into the valuable know-how of their colleagues to make time-consuming tasks easier to ultimately enable more efficiency and performance across an organisation."
You can check out the IBM Coscripter software tool here. µ
When will moderators remove the irrelevant and eye-straining nonsense that Drashek continuously dribbles in the comment section ?
Remove comment spam ! If it's not funny, not relevant, not readable, and especially if it is all of that in one, GET RID OF IT.
http://semiaccurate.com/2010/02/17/nec-working-16gbps-communication-interface/
Nec announced card whle back, now plan is to demonstrate nec 16 Gb/s light lan at CeBit.
Stewie, Losing Links Every Day.
Pick ibm story to state, upon further investigation Graphene has big problem, smallest it can do is 220 nm. Due to fact that carbon, although can form hot low density material, like arc lamp, never truely vaporizes & dope P & N for graphene comes undone from graphene if dispersed in vacumn chamber.
220 nm is planed first for CMOS by ibm & doing so now, such high speed can better control system as many strokes of CMOS Guard each stroke of 'puter.
Thinksing SSD cpugpumemory Once prophetized by: EL MIKE, will be answer.
Secondly, Charlie once again has story about LightScibe, that Intel 10 Gb/s lan like interconnect. NOW NEC has even better laser, 16 gb/s, So There, Take That, batman.
Zeroing in on ForeHead, Fire Lasers, Cloaking Devices UP. Fire Pho TOM t....Oops, got away from Me.
STeWie.
It's just begging to be exploited and misused. Someone once said, "Just because you CAN do something, it doesn't always mean you SHOULD". I don't remember where I heard this, but it seems to apply perfectly here.