GNOME Bugzilla – Bug 312221
Include in bookmarks metadata from webpages
Last modified: 2016-09-28 16:18:16 UTC
The idea was taken from here: http://robert.accettura.com/archives/2005/08/01/intelligent-bookmarking-draft/ There are many things from there that epiphany could adobt, and many things that arn't as problomatic in epiphany. I just want to suggest one point from his article and that is saving the website's metadata and then allow people to access it from the autocomplete. While there are websites that abuse metadata, if you are willing to bookmark it most of the chances are that the metadata is sane (also editing the metadata saved by the bookmark in the bookmark properties for the extreme case might be a good idea). Also, when bookmarking a site it could preselect the topics that look relevant based on the metadata. (Ex. I have a pyhon and a memory topic, and I am bookmarking a site that has python and memory in the metadata, then the bookmark dialog will have those topic preselected. I deselect memory (since my memory topic is about physical memory) and leave python preselected and bookmark it.
That looks like a slippery slope, with the websites telling you which topics your bookmark should have. Also, loads of websites have the same metadata for different pages. I think it's best to leave this sort of judgement to the user (I'm not even counting the problems with i18n where the metadata is in one language, and the interface and bookmark topics in another).
NOTABUG?
Providing new topic autocomplete options from the page meta data isn't such a crazy idea, IMHO. The user is still in charge of which topics get created.
Maybe extracting the keywords of the site and suggesting them under the Topics entry like: Topics: |__________| /Suggested by page: sports, soccer, fcbarcelona / Without selecting them, just a suggestion. This suggested topics would not be more than 3 or 4. I don't like at all the idea of blindly trusting the metadata that a website can offer.
Might be touched upon by the Epiphany SoC project.
I think we probably don't want this? Let's keep it simple?