This invention relates generally to computer systems and more specifically to a method, a system and an interface that facilitates localization, organization and use of information elements and user-selectable elements. More precisely, the present invention relates to a method of navigating among information elements.
With the always-increasing amount of documents one has to deal with on a daily basis it becomes harder to manage the documents (or information or file) on an item-by-item basis. An alternative document management system adapted to organize large amount of information would be beneficial to the user.
United States Patent Application Publication No.: US 2007/0214169 A1, published on Sep. 13, 2007 discloses a Multi-dimensional locating system and method (title), which is incorporated herewith by reference. The patent application provides embodiments for managing and displaying axes of documents and other computer-readable files. An axis of documents grouping a plurality of documents along a predetermined order, inter alia, is taught.
The use of an axis of documents brings some specific behavior as oppose to document presentation mechanism in the art. One of the specific of an axis is that one might want to navigate thereon while making selections of documents and seeing a magnified version of a document.
The use of a small number of axes of information elements on a display might result in a non-optimal use of the usable display area. A larger number of axes might be desirable to provide more information to a viewer. A number of challenges need to be addressed in order to provide functions performed on a larger quantity of documents. For instance, the selection of elements needs to be identified in a fashion discriminating the selected elements among the other documents. Additionally, the element on which the focus is also needs to be discriminated.
Also, navigation among a plurality of axes and among a plurality of groups of axes requires particular behaviors that the prior art fails to provide. Other possibilities could also be leveraged by the manipulation of a plurality of axes that the prior art fails to take advantage from.
In view of the prior art it appears that improvements over the prior art is desirable to improve the user experience and usability either with innovative graphical, structural or functional improvements.
The following presents a simplified summary of the invention in order to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the invention. This summary is not an extensive overview of the invention. It is not intended to identify key/critical elements of the invention or to delineate the scope of the invention. Its sole purpose is to present some concepts of the invention in a simplified form as a prelude to the more detailed description that is presented later.
This invention generally refers to user-selectable elements that might represent computer-readable files like documents and multimedia assets. Information elements can alternatively be referred to as, user-selectable elements, menu icons or thumbnails that are associated to an attribute, a category or a tag and arranged as explained below. In order to lighten the reading of the present specification, the term “document” is generally used without intending to limit the scope of the present patent application only to documents, unless expressly specified.
Also, the invention is generally described using an assembly of documents called an axis of documents. The axis of documents generally refers to, but is not limited to, a comprehensive graphical layout of documents. Hereinbelow referred to as an axis that is a substantially rectilinear arrangement of documents. The axis might not necessarily be straight but preferably has a consistent shape providing a viewer en indication of continuity therebetween documents disposed thereon. In other words, the axis of documents can be defined by a single axis or a double axis of documents (or more adjacent axes of documents) and the axis can be completely straight, slightly curved, substantially curved, angled, following a particular shape or having a consistent shape over which documents are disposed in a reasonably consistent fashion adapted to allow a viewer to infer a comprehensive suite of documents. The axes presented in the embodiments below are illustrated in the horizontal position while they could be disposed vertically without departing from the scope of the present disclosure.
An embodiment referred to below provides one or more groups of axes comprising documents thereon. Each axis of documents is preferably rectilinear to easily be located adjacent with other axes of documents to efficiently use the useful display area of the display. A system adapted to carry on the embodiments, a user graphical interface adapted to display the embodiments, a method adapted to provides the steps required to enable the embodiments and a medium storing instructions enabling the method once read by a machine are all considered within the scope of the present invention.
Therefore, an embodiment of the present invention provides a plurality of axes of documents adapted to form a group of axes of documents.
An embodiment of the present invention provides a mechanism adapted to visually discriminate a document on an axis of document representing the document in focus for a user.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides an active document on at least one axis of documents.
One embodiment of the present invention provides an active document on each of the axes of documents in a group of axes; the active document of the active axis of documents being adapted to change.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides an active document that is adapted to move between axes of documents.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides a method of selecting an active element along an axis by using keys on a keyboard; by pointing a mouse or another pointing device on a display, moving a body part in a sensing regions of multi-dimensional sensors, and touching a display with a finger (or hovered with a user-managed pointer or with a human body part contacting a touch-screen).
One embodiment of the present invention provides a method of magnifying an active document by displaying the selected document in a magnified fashion on a display.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides an active document on axes of documents that are not selected (e.g. active); the active documents on non-selected axes remaining still when the active document on the active axis moves.
One other embodiment of the present invention provides a method of selecting an active axis of documents among a plurality of axes of documents.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides a visually discriminating method of representing an active axis of documents.
One additional embodiment of the present invention provides a selected axis of documents bordered with enlarged rails or borders.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides an axis that becomes active when an active document is enabled.
An embodiment of the present invention provides a method of selecting documents on an axis of documents.
One other embodiment of the present invention provides a method of selecting a plurality of documents (adjacent or not) on an axis of documents.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides a method of performing actions on selected documents on an axis of documents.
One additional embodiment of the present invention provides to keep documents selected on an axis of documents that is not selected or active.
An embodiment of the present invention provides a mechanism adapted to assemble, or to display, a plurality of groups of axes of documents. One of the groups of axes of documents being active, and/or selected, while the other group(s) of axes being inactive, and/or non-selected. The actions being performed on the active axis of documents on the active group of axes.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides a mechanism adapted to select a group of axes of documents, among a plurality of groups of axes, by selecting a desired axis of documents.
One embodiment of the present invention provides groups of axes of documents that can be reordered therebetween on a graphical user interface by selecting and/or dragging a group of axes to a desired position.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides groups of axes of documents that are adapted to be independently longitudinally moveable and independently magnifyable.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides a method of navigating among axes of documents, the method comprising: displaying a plurality of documents along a plurality of axes of documents, each of the axes of documents having a respective collation function and an active document thereon, the active document of an axis of documents being adapted to switch to an adjacent document on the same axis thus enabling navigation on the axis of documents.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides a non-transitory computer-readable medium having stored thereon computer-executable instructions that, when executed by a processor of a computer system, provide a method of navigating among information elements disposed in a layout of information elements, defining a matrix-like structure, the method comprising: causing a plurality of information elements to be displayed among a plurality of axes of information elements; and causing a first information element from a departing axis of information elements, at an axial location thereof, to become an active information element; wherein the active information element is adapted to shift to a second information element disposed on an arrival axis of information elements when the arrival axis of information elements is parallel to the departing axis of information elements; and the second information element has an axial location corresponding to the axial location of the first information element.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides a computerized system configured to read computer-executable instructions adapted to enable a program enabling an interface adapted to display axes of computer-readable files and identify an active computer-readable file thereon, the computerized system comprising a processing unit configured to process the computer executable instructions; and a display configured to display the interface; the program, when executed, being operative to: cause a plurality of computer-readable files to be displayed among a plurality of axes of computer-readable files; and cause a first computer-readable file from a departing axis of computer-readable files, at an axial location thereof, to become an active computer-readable file; wherein the active computer-readable file is adapted to shift to a second computer-readable file disposed on an arrival axis of computer-readable files when the arrival axis of computer-readable files is parallel to the departing axis of computer-readable files; and the second computer-readable file has an axial location corresponding to the axial location of the first computer-readable file.
Other advantages might become apparent to the skilled reader of this patent specification in light of the appended drawings.
The present invention is now described with reference to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals are used to refer to like elements throughout. In the following description, for purposes of explanation, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. It may be evident, however, that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known structures and devices are shown in block diagram form in order to facilitate describing the present invention.
The description is separated with subtitles to facilitate its readability. The subtitles include descriptions of portions of invention that might be interrelated despite they might appear under different subtitles. In other words, subtitles are not intended to separate part of the same invention or different inventions described therein but are rather intended to structure the text.
The features provided in this specification mainly relates to basic principles for managing axes of documents. These code/instructions are preferably stored on a machine-readable medium adapted to be read and acted upon to with a computer or a machine having corresponding code/instructions reading capability.
Exemplary Network
The client devices 12 may include devices, such as mainframes, minicomputers, personal computers, laptops, personal digital assistants, telephones, or the like, capable of connecting to the network 20. The client devices 12 may transmit data over the network 20 or receive data from the network 20 via a wired, wireless, or optical connection.
The servers 14, 16, 18 may include one or more types of computer systems, such as a mainframe, minicomputer, or personal computer, capable of connecting to the network 20 to enable servers 14, 16, 18 to communicate with the client devices 12. In alternative implementations, the servers 14, 16, 18 may include mechanisms for directly connecting to one or more client devices 12. The servers 14, 16, 18 may transmit data over network 14 or receive data from the network 20 via a wired, wireless, or optical connection.
In an implementation consistent with the present invention, the server 14 may include a search engine 22 usable by the client devices 12. The servers 14 may store documents, such as web pages, accessible by the client devices 12.
With reference to
The content cloud 30 represent a content source such as the Internet, where content exists at various locations across the globe. The content includes multimedia content such as audio and video. The mediator 28 allows the content cloud to provide content to devices 40-48.
The content database 32 is a storage device that maintains content. The content database 32 may be a stand-alone device on an external communication network. The mediator 28 communicates with the content database 32 to access and retrieve content.
The content devices 34-38 include intelligent devices, such as, for example, personal computers, laptops, cell phones and personal digital assistants. The content devices 32-38 are capable or storing content information.
The devices 40-48 are intelligent devices that receive content from a content source 30-38. However, the devices 30-38 can also operate as servers to distribute content to other client devices.
Exemplary Client Architecture
Now, with reference to
A number of program modules may be stored on the hard disk 127, magnetic disk 129, (magneto) optical disk 131, ROM 124 or RAM 125, such as an operating system 135 (for example, Windows® NT™ 4.0, sold by Microsoft® Corporation of Redmond, Wash.), one or more application programs 136, other program modules 137 (such as “Alice”, which is a research system developed by the User Interface Group at Carnegie Mellon University available at www.Alice.org, OpenGL from Silicon Graphics Inc. of Mountain View Calif., or Direct 3D from Microsoft Corp. of Bellevue Wash.), and/or program data 138 for example.
A user may enter commands and information into the personal computer 120 through input devices, such as a keyboard 140, a camera 141 and pointing device 142 for example. Other input devices (not shown) such as a microphone, joystick, game pad, satellite dish, scanner, a touch sensitive screen, accelerometers adapted to sense movements of the user or movements of a device, or the like may also be included. These and other input devices are often connected to the processing unit 121 through a serial port interface 146 coupled to the system bus. However, input devices may be connected by other interfaces, such as a parallel port, a game port, blue tooth connection or a universal serial bus (USB). For example, since the bandwidth of the camera 141 may be too great for the serial port, the video camera 141 may be coupled with the system bus 123 via a video capture card (not shown). The video monitor 147 or other type of display device may also be connected to the system bus 123 via an interface, such as a video adapter 148 for example. The video adapter 148 may include a graphics accelerator. One or more speaker 162 may be connected to the system bus 123 via a sound card 161 (e.g., a wave table synthesizer such as product number AWE64 Gold Card from Creative® Labs of Milpitas, Calif.). In addition to the monitor 147 and speaker(s) 162, the personal computer 120 may include other peripheral output devices (not shown), such as a printer for example. As an alternative or an addition to the video monitor 147, a stereo video output device, such as a head mounted display or LCD shutter glasses for example, could be used.
The personal computer 120 may operate in a networked environment that defines logical connections to one or more remote computers, such as a remote computer 149. The remote computer 149 may be another personal computer, a server, a router, a network PC, a peer device or other common network node, and may include many or all of the elements described above relative to the personal computer 120, although only a memory storage device has been illustrated in
When used in a LAN, the personal computer 120 may be connected to the LAN 14 through a network interface adapter (or “NIC”) 153. When used in a WAN, such as the Internet, the personal computer 120 may include a modem 154 or other means for establishing communications over the wide area network 152 (e.g. Wi-Fi, WiMax . . . ). The modem 154, which may be internal or external, may be connected to the system bus 123 via the serial port interface 146. In a networked environment, at least some of the program modules depicted relative to the personal computer 120 may be stored in the remote memory storage device. The network connections shown are exemplary and other means of establishing a communications link between the computers may be used.
The Interface
An interface program providing an interface for managing documents in accordance with an embodiment of the invention is installed on a machine e.g. a computer system. The interface can be programmed using various programming languages e.g. C++, Java or other suitable programming languages. Programming of these languages is well known in the art and is adapted to be readable to provide executable instructions to a hardware system and will not be further described therein. The interface might run through the operating system and the hardware of the computer system or, alternatively, through a network based system e.g. client-server, and/cloud computing system. The interface is adapted to manage documents, computer files, pictures, multimedia content, applications (i.e. computer programs), menu elements, sets of icons and other user-selectable elements in a comprehensive fashion.
Several embodiments follows: Documents are stored on a machine-readable medium and can be retrieved on demand when needed with the interface program. Documents are disposed in an axis-like layout providing a visually comprehensive display arrangement of the documents. The axis can, illustratively, among other possibilities, be based on a selection of attribute(s), tag(s), category(ies), owner of documents, a chronological order, a statistical order or an order representing an increasing file size. Combinations of the above-listed possible choices, inter alia, are possible if desired to build a query adapted to reduce the number of documents to be displayed on the axis. The axis thus helps the viewer to infer additional meaning from the comprehensive layout, consistent display and distribution of the documents thereon.
An axis is adapted to accommodate a single type of documents or, if desired, more than one type of documents, and/or a mix of documents, computer files, multimedia contents and/or user-selectable menu elements. Documents might overlap to squeeze more documents on the space available on the display. Magnification of selected documents on an axis can be made to increase the level of details of the selected documents.
Using an axis of documents helps to meaningfully and intuitively display a group of documents. An axis of documents can be embodied as being a substantially linear distribution of documents adapted to dispose each document to be displayed on a line or on a curved line. A curved or a circular axis of documents is also contemplated to be within the scope of the present disclosure. The exact shape of the axis is secondary, what matters, inter alia, is that the layout structure of an axis provides a comprehensive suite of documents from which a viewer can infer an order, a sequence or a relationship between documents. The display of the axis of documents might be made in accordance with a predetermined order (e.g. chronologically), or not. A chronological distribution of documents can sort documents on a timeline. The chronological order can either be linear or non-linear; meaning that a unit of time has always the same graphical length on the display in the linear configuration. The non-linear configuration might non-evenly display similar units of time because the distribution of documents along the timeline prevails over the linearity of time. Another illustrative embodiment is a group of juxtaposed axes of documents grouped together to form an axis of documents referring to a matrix of documents.
The display of documents on an axis of documents allows to contextually manage documents as a flow, or an ongoing suite, of documents instead of dealing with each document independently. By getting away from managing each document independently it becomes possible to efficiently deal with a significantly higher number of documents and still keep the documents in a structured order.
Each axis of documents assembles documents in accordance with, for example, a selected tag, a category, keywords, or an attribute that is commonly shared among the documents displayed on the axis of documents. The term “attribute” will consistently be used throughout the instant specification to lighten the reading of the text and will include the other commonality between documents described therein unless otherwise specified. The selection of one or more attribute (using Boolean logic for instant) determines which documents will be displayed on the axis of documents. If no specific attribute is selected, then, the axis of documents displays all documents. Thus, all documents on the same axis of documents are normally associated with the selected set or combination of attributes (trivial data, like publicity or specific related information, could be added to an axis as long as the outcome remains a presentation of documents resulting from a query without departing from the scope of the present invention). In addition, a timeline can be used to determine the order of the suite of documents on the axis of documents. Chronological ordering is a very intuitive ordering to humans and is one of the preferred ways to present documents on an axis of documents. In the case of a matrix of documents, then, one axis (e.g. horizontal direction) of the matrix can represent a timeline while the other axis (e.g. vertical direction, orthogonal, . . . ) represents another criterion like, for example, the type of computer files each document relates to. The other axis can also use a timeline if desirable.
The attributes of a document can be selected to create another axis of documents. The attribute of a document from the newly created axis of documents can be selected to create an additional axis of documents and so on so forth. This is what could be called “relational navigation” and is well described in the United States patent application publication referred to at the beginning of the present patent specification. Hence, the user can “navigate” along axes of documents in accordance with their categorization to visualize the documents. Navigation tools are provided with the interface to allow navigation through various axes of documents, when a plurality of axes is enabled, and through the documents of a single axis of documents. In the context of the present invention, a single suite of documents forming an axis along a timeline is one of the preferred embodiments because it is easy to sequentially navigate throughout the documents disposed along the axis. Other graphical layouts of documents might become obvious for a skilled reader in light of the present application and would be considered within the scope of this application.
When only a portion of the axis is visible, a play of zoom, pan and movements along the axis allows a viewer to navigate on the axis and change the document(s) that is (are) displayed on the display. A small display area could display only one document from the axis of documents while the remaining documents from the axis of documents are not displayed but remain nonetheless at their respective “virtual” position on the axis and ready to be displayed if the axis is scrolled to show other documents. In other words, if we consider a mobile platform like a mobile phone having a small display, the small display area might allow to efficiently displaying only one document at the time. However, the displayed document being part of an axis of documents, the other documents on the axis of documents remain displayable in accordance with their respective position on the axis of documents when the axis is scrolled/navigated/gestured.
Referring now to
The selection of an axis of documents 202 to become an active axis of documents 207 can be made via a simple selection performed with a pointing device on a display, hand gestures on a touch sensitive display, body movement gestures in a sensing region of multi-dimensional sensors or other suitable means to influence the selection of the axis 202. A selection of the rails 215, or wherever on the axis of documents, will select the axis of documents. If the selection is made on a document 200 of the axis of documents 202, the pointed document 200 will become the active document 220 in one of the embodiments of the invention. Alternatively, in another embodiment, the active document 220 of a non-selected axis of documents 202 will remain the same until a new active document 220 is selected.
An active document 220 is a document on which the focus is put on instead of the other documents on the same axis or on a plurality of other axes. Specific functions are associated with an active document 220 (or a document in focus). For example, an active document 220 can be magnified in a separate display area to better appreciate the details of the document, rapid change of active documents can rapidly change the magnified document in the separate windows, the active element can change from one document to another document to navigate among documents without loosing selection of other documents, . . . . Conversely, selecting documents allows to act on the selected documents to, for example, copy the document, refresh the thumbnail of the document and so on so forth. In other words, the activation of a document allows actions thereon that are unlikely possible if only a function of selecting documents is provided.
The first axis of documents 202 can be automatically selected when a group of axes of documents 204 is displayed for a first time. A default selected axis of documents 202 can be defined in the group of axes of documents preferences to always get the same selected axis of documents when the group of axes of documents 204 is displayed for the first time.
The active axis of documents A, 205 is visually discriminated by, for example, enlarged axis border, or rails, 210 as opposed to axis rails 215 of unselected axes 202, B and C. Other active axis of documents 205 identification could be used, like a change in color of the axis of documents 205 and a change in color, thickness or texture of the rails 215, without departing from the scope of the present invention.
In one embodiment, each axis of documents 202, A, B and C has an active document 220 illustratively identified with a bolder dotted border 222. In the present situation, documents A-8, B-8 and C-8 are identified as active documents 220.
In the present embodiment, only the active document 220 A-8 of the active axis A, 205 can be acted upon without changing the selected axis of documents. For example, only the selected document A-8, 220 of the active axis A, 205 is moveable using the keyboard's arrows, for instance in an embodiment, or by hand gesture in another embodiment directed to touch screen navigation. Thus the active document can change in accordance with the action of the user. In the present situation, if a user actuates the left arrow on the keyboard, the active document 220 will change to A-7 then A-6, A-5 and so on so forth till document A1 is active. If the user further move to the left then the focus of the display will change to see the next document to the left (A-0) that is not visible at the moment. The same mechanism works on the right side to see document A-9 for instance.
Information 225 related to the selected axis of documents A, 205 and/or the active document C-8, 222 is displayed on the header 230 located above 230 the group of axes 204. The following information can, inter alia, be displayed simultaneously or consecutively on the header 230:
The size, color, width and height of the header 230 can be modified without departing from the scope of the present invention.
As illustrated in the embodiment illustrated in
The selection of a document 200, with a pointing device or other means, of another will enable the lastly selected document as the active document 220. The active document 220 in the case of a multiple selection of documents 200 will be the lastly selected document 235, 200.
Turning now to
The active document 220 has moved to the left to document B-4 as opposed to document B-5 while document B-5 remains selected as illustrated in
Holding down the COMMAND key (or a proper gesture) and selecting document B-4 it now shows in darker filling in
Now, from the illustrative scenario of
Still beginning with the illustrative scenario of
Again, another example beginning with the illustrative scenario of
Turning now to
On
The inactive group of axes of documents 260 also has a plurality of axes of documents, a latent active axis of documents C and latent inactive axes of documents A and B. We consider latent axes of documents because they have a particular state in an inactive group of axes 260—that is illustrated in a lighter color thereof to ensure sufficient discrepancy with the active group of axes of documents 250.
Still referring to
In embodiments of the present specification is presented selected and non-selected axes of documents. At least one axis from a plurality of axes can be selected to apply actions thereon. It is therefore possible to perform operations on axes that is going to effect, in at least one embodiment, the documents contained therein. A selected axis is going to be graphically discriminated from the other axes by, for example, a bolder border 215.
In the present embodiment of the invention, axes of documents may be considered as active and/or selected.
Selection of a plurality of axes of documents gives possibility to the user of doing operations to all the selection, such as changing properties to a common value, joining axes of document in a group, etc.
One embodiment of the present invention is to consider selected documents in a plurality of documents as a common selection of document. When a document is selected, all shared instance in all axes of documents should be marked as selected as well.
The user interface may gives user several menu commands or keyboard shortcuts to do operation on active or selected axes of documents. In the illustrative example
One can appreciate the way the Set union operation can be easily made with these axes of documents. Selection of axes of documents can be use to made other Set operations.
All these user activities may be describe as a succession of mathematical Set operation. By example, user operations illustrated on
“(((is document 200.4) UNION (has attribute C)) MINUS (has attribute B)) UNION ((has attribute A) INTERSECTION (has attribute B))”
The user may use this selection to create a new axis of document with selected documents only. This new axis of document may use this Set description to create a Boolean predicative condition over documents.
One embodiment of the present invention is that the user may have the choice to have a static or dynamic document selection. These two modes affect documents that are added, modified or removed live. These events may happen because another process or other users over a network, by example, access the documents that are currently shown in axis of documents.
Static selection is a conservative way to react to these events. Added document are not added to selection, modified document stay in selection and removed documents are removed from selection. This is the default selection behaviour in most applications as it is the most predictable system, but lacks power.
Dynamic selection is an operation-based selection. Using the Set operation made from select all, unselect all, intersection and other Set operations on selection, the document events stay consistent with this operation. Added documents get selected if they respect the selection operation scheme, modified documents get selected or unselected if they respect or not the selection operation scheme. Finally, the removed documents get removed from selection.
This strategy of dynamic selection may be used in large database results where the client application may truncate the axis of document for bandwidth, speed or memory optimization. As the user navigates in the large axis of document, parts of it may be loaded (and other parts unloaded) by the system. In this situation, when a user made a Set operation, such as a “select all”, “unselect all”, unions, intersections, differences, the server could compute a Boolean operation from this succession of Set operation and makes change happen on the server-side when the user choose to do an operation on the list of documents selected. It frees the client application of determining the complete list of selected documents and communicates the server the succession of Set operation or its Boolean equivalent formula instead of the complete list of selected documents.
Another embodiment of this invention is to gives the possibility to the user to maintain a plurality of selected documents Sets. The interface may show only one selection at a time and give the user a possibility to switch from a selection Set to another, create a virgin selection and delete a selection. The interface may also show multiple selections at the same time by using different color or patterns over the selected documents of the different Sets. Finally, these distinct Sets may be used to create a new Set by using Set operation over other Sets, such as union, intersection, difference, etc. This gives the possibility to the user to construct complex Sets selection operations.
The selection Set operations can be saved, loaded, used to create new axis of document of the selection, used the condition to create visual distinctive features, create permissions rules, etc.
Turning now to
In
Returning back to active document 300, no movement of the active document is possible above because there is no more axes 202 above of axis A 202. No movement is possible below because there is no adjacent document 200 directly below document 300 on axis B 202 at location 312. The same dynamic is applied to document 316 where a downward movement is possible toward document 320 because document 320 is adjacent to document 316. One can appreciate that in the embodiment illustrated in
Still referring to
Another embodiment illustrated in
Document 352 illustrates another embodiment that allows navigation to another axis 202 of documents despite there is no adjacent document on the adjacent axis of document 202. This “jump” 354 to the next available document 356 can be based on a preselected option or by being actuated by a specific action like, for instance, a double-click of the arrow pointing above on the keyboard, of the like.
Another embodiment is illustrated in
Finally, the present specification has recited many possible embodiments that can be practiced independently and/or collectively, if desirable. It is considered that the text of the present specification has been drafted as it is for helping a reader to understand many different embodiments taken independently and is not intended to limit the scope of any of the embodiments or combinations thereof.
The description and the drawings that are presented above are meant to be illustrative of the present invention. They are not meant to be limiting of the scope of the present invention. Modifications to the embodiments described may be made without departing from the present invention, the scope of which is defined by the following claims:
The present application is a continuation of, and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 120 to, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/244,513, filed Sep. 25, 2011, entitled ACTIVE ELEMENTS, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, and which is a nonprovisional of, and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) to, U.S. provisional patent application No. 61/438,609, filed on Feb. 1, 2011, entitled ACTIVE AND SELECTED DOCUMENTS ON AXES THEREOF; EXPANDABLE AND COLLAPSIBLE AXES OF DOCUMENTS; NON-HOMOGENEOUS OBJECTS MAGNIFICATION AND REDUCTION, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Any publication of and any patent issuing from the foregoing U.S. patent applications is hereby incorporated herein by reference. Furthermore, the disclosure of the priority provisional application is contained in the Appendix hereto, which is incorporated herein by reference.
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Haystack Project; David R. Karger, Stephen J. Garland, Karun Bakshi, David Huynh, Nicholas Matsakis, Dennis Quan, Vineet Sinha, Jaime Teevan, Yuan Shen, Punyashloka Biswal, Artem Gleyzer, Ryan Manuel, Alexandre P. Poliakov, Amanda Smith, Lynn A. Stein, Eytan Adar, Mark Asdoorian, Robert Aspell, Wendy Chien, Gabriel Cunningham, Jonathan Derryberry, Adam Holt, Joshua Kramer, Percy Liang, Ilya Lisansky, Aidan Low, Enrique A. Muñ{tilde over ( )}oz Torres, Mark Rosen, Kai Shih, Svetlana Shnitser, Ben Walter, Marina Zhurakhinskaya; Massachsetts Institute of Technology; http://web.archive.org/web/20070415053620/http://haystack.lcs.mit.edu/ ; http://groups.csail.mit.edu/haystack/ ; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haystack_%28MIT_project%29 ; Published May 10, 2013. |
Chandler Project; Grant Baillie, Jeffrey Harris, Sheila Mooney, Katie Capps Parlante, Jared Rhine, Mimi Yin, Eugene Kim, Alex Russell, Andre Mueninghoff, Al Cho, Aleks Totic, Alec Flett, Andi Vajda, Andy Hertzfeld, Aparna Kadakia, Bobby Rullo, Brendan O'Connor, Brian Douglas Skinner, Brian Kirsch, Brian Moseley, Bryan Stearns, Chao Lam, Chris Haumesser, David Surovell, Donn Denman, Ducky Sherwood, Ed Bindl, Edward Chao, Heikki Toivonen, Jed Burgess, John Anderson, John Townsend, Jürgen Botz, Lisa Dusseault, Lori Motko, Lou Montulli, Mark Jaffe, Matthew Eernisse, Michael Toy, Mike Taylor, Mitch Kapor, Morgen Sagen, Pieter Hartsook, Philippe Bossut, Priscilla Chung, Robin Dunn, Randy Letness, Rys McCusker, Stuart Parmenter, Suzette Tauber, Ted Leung, Travis Vachon, Vinubalaji Gopal ; Open Source Applications Foundation ; http://chandlerproject.org/ ; Published May 10, 2013. |
Emacs Org-Mode; Carsten, Bastien Guerry, Eric Shulte, Dan Davison, John Wiegley, Sebastian Rose, Nicolas Goaziou, Achim Gratz, Nick Dokos, Russel Adams, Suvayu Ali, Luis Anaya, Thomas Baumann, Michael Brand, Christophe Bataillon, Alex Bochannek, Jan Böcker, Brad Bozarth, Tom Breton, Charles Cave, Pavel Chalmoviansky, Gregory Chernov, Sacha Chua, Toby S. Cubitt, Baoqiu Cui, Eddward DeVilla, Nick Dokos, Kees Dullemond, Thomas S. Dye, Christian Egli, David Emery, Nic Ferrier, Miguel A. Figueroa-Villanueva, John Foerch, Raimar Finken, Mikael Fornius, Austin Frank, Eric Fraga, Barry Gidden, Niels Giesen, Nicolas Goaziou, Kai Grossjohann, Brian Gough, Bernt Hansen, Manuel Hermenegildo, Phil Jackson, Scott Jaderholm, Matt Jones, Tokuya Kameshima, Jonathan Leech-Pepin, Shidai Liu, Matt Lundin, David Maus, Jason F. McBrayer, Max Mikhanosha, Dmitri Minaev, Stefan Monnier, Richard Moreland, Rick Moynihan, Todd Neal, Greg Newman, Tim O'Callaghan, Osamu Okano, Takeshi Okano, Oliver Oppitz, Scott Otterson, Pete Phillips, Francesco Pizzolante, Martin Pohlack, T.V. Raman, Matthias Rempe, Paul Rivier, Kevin Rogers, Frank Ruell, Jason Riedy, Philip Rooke, Christian Schlauer, Christopher Schmidt, Paul Sexton, Tom Shannon, Ilya Shlyakhter, Stathis Sideris, Daniel Sinder, Dale Smith, James TD Smith, Adam Spiers, Ulf Stegemann, Andy Stewart, David O'Toole, Jambunathan K, Sebastien Vauban, Stefan Vollmar, Jürgen Vollmer, Samuel Wales, Chris Wallace, David Wainberg, Carsten Wimmer, Roland Winkler, Piotr Zielinski; http://orgmode.org/ ; Published May 10, 2013. |
The lifestream approach to reorganizing the information world; Nicolas Carriero, Scott Fertig; Eric Freeman and David Gelernter; Apr. 1995; Yale University. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130263050 A1 | Oct 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61438609 | Feb 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13244513 | Sep 2011 | US |
Child | 13798718 | US |