Archive for the ‘News’ Category.

Preview of the new version of A.nnotate

The next version of A.nnotate will be out in November - it includes a number of new features to make it easier to collaborate on PDF and Word documents in the browser. We were planning a Sept release, but delayed it to give us time to include various extra features which users were requesting.

The main changes will be support for image annotation so you can attach notes to figures on PDF and Word documents as well as to highlighted text. To make sharing and organizing documents easier, there will also be shared folders so invited colleagues will automatically have access to documents in the shared area. You can opt to receive email notifications when someone adds comments to your documents. There is a new home page with news on invitations and recent comments and shared documents.

Text annotation will support strikethrough and text-insert styles, and there will be more control of note visibility: as well as notes shared with all readers of a document, you can mark notes as private (so only you can see them) or as feedback to the document owner. Document owners also get more control over who can add notes and tags, and can close documents for comments when the review period is over.

A new Export document and notes as PDF feature makes for easier printing.

There has been a lot of interest in using A.nnotate as a component within existing document / content management systems; the A.nnotate API allows you to integrate A.nnotate into your current systems and can be used with local installations of A.nnotate.

Thanks to everyone who sent in suggestions for new features - and let us know if you have more requests (by email to support [at] nnotate.com or using the comments below).

A.nnotate at the Edinburgh Repository Fringe

Repository Fringe Picture

Just back from Edinburgh Repository Fringe - a gathering of people interested in making research data and publications more useful and easy to access. There were great keynote talks from Dorothea Salo ['the institutional repository is dead'] and David De Roure ['how repositories can avoid failing like the grid'], and lots of ‘performances’ in the spirit of an unconference / BarCamp event.

A common theme seemed to be that setting up a university-wide database and expecting researchers to populate it by filling out forms just doesn’t work; but providing easy to use web services for collaboration and improving visibility / citation counts of research is the way to go.

We’ve been thinking along these lines too - our A.nnotate.com service can be used to enhance existing document repositories with private / shared annotation features (using the A.nnotate APIs). As well as A.nnotate, we also run the PublicationsList.org service which makes it easy for researchers to maintain their list of publications on the web - and can be used as a front end service to institutional archives to make repository deposit as automated as possible.

Some of the interesting ideas from the meeting (see the repofringe08 wiki for the full programme):

  • Ways for sharing/presenting research data - including Stuart Macdonald’s DISC-UK DataShare project with interactive widgets, Simon Coles experiments with trackbacks / pings / ratings / comments for research data in chemistry, David De Roure’s MyExperiment facebook-like social networking site for bioinformatics data which looks like it has great potential beyond its current emphasis on sharing glorified makefiles graphical workflows
  • The dangers of ‘Bit Rot’ [talk by Richard Wright, BBC archives] - should you archive the uncompressed version of files (e.g. TIFF rather than JPG?) given that all digital formats (tape / disk) degrade over time, and a few bits lost from a compressed file can render it useless, but uncompressed formats degrade much more gracefully. My immediate instinct would be to compress and store multiple copies for redundancy / error checking … but for the longer term (10s / 100s of years) the uncompressed version is preferable.

Spotted in Edinburgh on the way to the meeting:-



New pricing model for educational users

We’ve just announced a bargain flat-fee server deal for educational use: $1995 per server to use how you want. There are no limits on the number of users or volume of documents allowed. That just depends on the hardware you put it on. In return, we’d like your feedback to help improve the system.

A significant fraction of our inquiries come from colleges and universities that see applications for A.nnotate among their staff and students. Naturally, teachers can use it to provide feedback on student assignments instead of writing on printed copies. But there have been a range of other creative suggestions too. Staff could prepare a folder of annotated websites with comments or questions in particular places, or students could be asked to annotate a particular text.

Some of these fit easily with the present configuration, but others could do with some extensions. For example, to get twenty students separately annotating the same document, you need to make twenty separate copies at present. Most of all though, the current model is based on users who have accounts and can upload documents, and guest annotators who provide feedback on those documents. In a classroom environment though you could sometimes want just one user and 20 annotators, but at other times maybe everyone should be a user. Do you need a single user license or a 20-user one?

We do not want to limit the ways teachers can use A.nnotate, and everyone knows that complicated per-seat pricing models are a real turn-off. Hence the flat-fee deal. You buy the server license outright and do what you like with it. You can probably get a thousand students on one server as long as they don’t all try to upload assignments in the same half hour before a deadline. All we ask is that you let us know from time to time how you’re using it so that we can share the ideas with others, and to let us know if you have any suggestions for new developments.

Happy a.nnotating!

A.nnotate server available for installation

The A.nnotate server is now available for installation on your own local machines (e.g. on an intranet, or on your own dedicated web server) - see Standalone A.nnotate servers for details.

When running on your own servers you’ll see the same easy-to-use browser based interface familiar from the hosted service on A.nnotate.com but browsing and uploading should be quicker. You can also keep documents securely behind your firewall and you can upload as many documents as your hard disk space will allow.

Server licenses start at $2000 and are based on the number of users from your organisation authorised to upload documents to the server. You can have any number of annotating users at no extra charge.

For developers: there is also an API for embedding an A.nnotate panel within your own web application or content management system.

A.nnotate update

The A.nnotate.com site has now been updated; new features for PDF annotation include:

  • International character sets now supported (UTF-8) for multi-language documents and notes
  • Annotate scanned, image based PDFs as well as text based PDFs.
  • Support for PDF documents which contain pages of multiple sizes and orientations
  • Faster import from Microsoft Word and OpenOffice formats
  • The web snapshot tool from your documents page now lets you annotate any PDF or Word document on the web by pasting a URL link (this also works for links to web pages)

There is now also a simple way to export your notes on a page as plain text; the Tools > Plain notes menu option in the top right of your documents page shows your notes in a new window, where you can copy / paste into other applications.

More info at A.nnotate.com.

Information for existing users of A.nnotate …

You might need to clear your browser cache and/or press the browser reload button in order to fetch the latest version of the A.nnotate code; please let us know if you run in to any problems with upgrading to the latest version.

A.nnotate launched

Documents have long been the information dead-ends of the web, needing separate plugins and viewers to download and read them. Now A.nnotate.com enhances PDF, Word documents and any web page to allow highlighting text, interactive comments and discussion right in the web browser.

Edinburgh, Scotland, 4th April 2008: Textensor Limited, an Edinburgh University startup company today launched A.nnotate.com, a new service that everyone can use to discuss, review and index their documents online.

A.nnotate lets users attach notes to precise places in the text of PDF, Word documents and web pages online. It is easy to use and operates in a web browser: the user simply highlights text and writes a note. All notes, documents and tags are added to their personal searchable index making it simple to get back to the right place. Uploaded documents are initially private, but can be shared by emailing a link. This lets several users comment on the same online copy of the document and add replies to each others notes. It acts like a shared online version of Word or PDF comments but avoids the usual problems of emailing documents back and forth and having to merge comments from different people.

Applications include peer review of research papers, indexing documents and web pages, web research and collaboration on writing new documents. It is also being used for content curation and populating scientific databases. Curators tag words or phrases in articles which are then used to create database and index entries. The advantage is that claims in the database are then backed up by references to the precise source and context in the literature.

According to Dr Robert Cannon, co-founder of Textensor Limited, “This is for anyone who has ever made a note in the margin of a printed copy but then couldn’t find it later, or had problems reading other people’s handwriting. It is about coping with the overwhelming volume of documents that we have to handle in a more efficient and reliable way. You can put web pages, PDF and Word in the same system and be sure that you can return to an exact place on the page later, and also share your comments securely with colleagues online.”

The system is available as an online web service and also for in-house licensing. It operates entirely within a web browser and does not require any plugins. Further details and a free trial are available from a.nnotate.com.