The present invention relates to reading, viewing and annotating web-based documents. More particularly, this aspect of the present invention relates to annotating web-based documents in such a way as to provide easily searchable supplemental content and context.
The present invention also relates to social networking based on common reading interests. More particularly, this aspect of the present invention relates to interactively reading web-based documents with a community of users. Members of community meet and interact with each other via the social network.
The present invention also relates to online advertising. More particularly, this aspect of the invention includes a marketplace where publishers make advertising space available to ad buyers.
Annotations have been around for as long as there have been books. Highlights, underlines, and notes written in the margins are examples of such annotations. Annotated bibliographies provide descriptions about how sources are used in constructing a paper or argument. Such comments may provide summaries, express relevance, or include ideas inspired by the underlying document. In the case of internet annotations, many of the same benefits are shared and improved upon. Links from online documents to related materials are one such improvement.
Because of the open nature of the internet, there is often too much information to sort through given a limited amount of time. Also, specific groups of individuals may share unique interests apart from the world-wide online community. For these reasons, there is a continuing need to streamline information sharing and gathering processes.
An online system provides users with tools to annotate publications and share such annotations with other users. Publications annotated by a community of users become a richer source of information for the community.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate one or more embodiments of the present invention and, together with the detailed description, serve to explain the principles and implementations of the invention.
In the drawings:
Embodiments of the present invention are described herein in the context of a system for creating, reading and filtering annotations to web-based documents (WBDs). Reference will now be made in detail to implementations of the present invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The same reference indicators will usually be used throughout the drawings and the following detailed description to refer to the same or like parts.
In the interest of clarity, not all of the routine features of the implementations described herein are shown and described. It will, of course, be appreciated that in the development of any such actual implementation, numerous implementation-specific decisions must be made in order to achieve the developer's specific goals, such as compliance with application- and business-related constraints, and that these specific goals will vary from one implementation to another and from one developer to another. Moreover, it will be appreciated that such a development effort might be complex and time-consuming, but would nevertheless be a routine undertaking of engineering for those of ordinary skill in the art having the benefit of this disclosure.
Those of ordinary skill in the art will realize that the following description of the present invention is illustrative only and not in any way limiting. Other embodiments of the invention will readily suggest themselves to such skilled persons having the benefit of this disclosure.
The invention involves a computer network based system for reading and annotating documents by a community of users. Such documents may be referred to as web-based documents (WBDs), publications, or other similar terms. Such documents may represent text, images, and/or video. The system allows a user to access a document and associate one or more annotations to any part of the document as chosen by the user. Each annotation is stored in a database and made available to other users in the community. Subsequent readers of the document may view the annotations to enhance their experience of viewing the document. Each user in the community has the opportunity to read the underlying document and its associated annotations and/or add further annotations according to their own interests. An annotation filter incorporated into the system provides the user with the ability to control the source and quality of the annotations according to criteria chosen by the user.
The viewer is implemented as web-based software, and is compatible with a variety of browsers.
The viewer provides a variety of presentation options for a user to select from when viewing a WBD.
To create an annotation a user selects the portion of the WBD that they want to annotate (typically using a mouse), thereby creating a highlight at the selected area. Then a dialogue box appears in which the user can enter the annotation. When the user is done, the new annotation is stored in the database and is available for viewing by further users.
Another portion of the screen (in this case, the left side) may display information boxes showing community information, session information, information regarding the WBD, and other information as desired. Information boxes 318, 320, and 322 may be set to display, among other items: the screen names of other users who are currently viewing the document, the screen names of users who have left annotations, instant messages from other users in the community, video from other users, a personal notebook for recording notes, and annotation filter settings as described below.
Presentation options made available by the viewer include auto zoom based on screen size, zoom in/zoom out capability, paging up and down and scrolling through documents, tables of contents with links, search capability, embedding of audio and visual feeds, and dynamic insertion of additional pages into documents for contextual advertising.
A primary advantage of the system is to provide a user in a community of users access to knowledge, opinions, commentary, and related content contributed by other users.
Communities of users may be defined in many ways. In the broadest since, the largest community includes everyone who uses the system. Within this universe of users, however, smaller groups may be defined. For example, a community may include a class of students who are all using the same textbook which is available on the system as a publication. In this case, the community of students may add their annotations as part of a joint learning experience. In another example, the community may include subscribers to a magazine that is available on the system as a publication. Other communities may be defined in others ways including by groups of friends, people who share common interests, and people who share an interest in a particular publication.
In a preferred embodiment, each page of a publication is stored in the library as a pdf file and converted to an swf file when opened by a user. Each page includes a coordinate system that maps every pixel on the page. When a user chooses to annotate a part of the page, the user employs a mouse to select the words/image/portion of the page that they wish to annotate, thereby creating an annotation link (visible as a highlight) that is visually layered over the page. The coordinate system relates the annotation link to the portion of the page selected by the user so that the position of the annotation link relative to the information on the page does not change if the page is resized by the browser or viewer. Once the annotation link is created, the user then adds the content of the annotation. The software routine that links annotations to particular portions of a WBD may be referred to as a scaling engine.
Further information is linked to each annotation and stored in the database. As described below, this information may be filtered by a subsequent user to select annotations that are most likely to be useful for the subsequent user. Such further information may include, but is not limited to, the screen name of the annotator, personal data regarding the annotator, community affiliations of the annotator, the time and date the annotation was made, ranking information related to the annotator or annotation that is produced by the community in response to the annotator or annotation, and further commentary on the annotation. The categories of further information may be referred to as quality types, as these types of information may reflect on the quality of the annotation either directly (as in ranking data) or indirectly. For example, a filterable field may be the date that a particular annotation was created. A quality type for that field might then be a range of dates. In other words, a quality type is a particular description of an aspect of an annotation. Quality types may be assigned by the creator of the annotation (e.g., argument in favor) or assigned by the system (e.g., accumulated ranking data).
Users may create individual accounts within the system. Such accounts may be associated with a screen name visible to other users, and also associated with annotations made on behalf of the account. Individual accounts may have both private and public functions. Private functions include passwords, payments, subscriptions, reading and browsing logs, annotations for personal use. Public functions include contributing annotations to the community and group memberships. Instant messaging, video-conferencing and exchange, and audio messaging and exchange may be used in conjunction with individual accounts. The system may store data related to both personal and private functions and use it to enhance the user experience. Such enhancements may include featuring titles from the bookstore that the user may be interested in, recommending reading groups having users with similar social graphs, and recommending reading events.
The annotation filter 440 employs instructions from the user in conjunction with information associated with each annotation to select the annotations most likely to be useful for the individual user. Filtering falls into two general categories: individual filtering and social filtering.
Individual filtering uses information identifying an individual annotator, or relating to personal affiliations of an individual annotator. Examples include groups comprised of friends, and students taking a particular class together. Another type of individual filtering might select annotations made by respected commentators and experts such as professors, columnists and commentators, and political leaders. In some cases, viewing these annotations may require payment by the user via a subscription. Another category of individuals is based on past or current readers.
Social filtering relies on information related to the content of the annotation, and values assigned to individual annotators independent of the personal affiliations of the individual annotators. One type of social filtering employs personal data provided by annotators. Such data may include age, gender, family history, hobbies, political views, education, employment and other information. A user may filter annotations by selecting to view annotations made by individuals with certain defined backgrounds. For example, when reading a passage in a sociology textbook a user may select to see only annotations by women professors between the ages of 50 and 60 who have children. In another method of social filtering, the personal data may be processed by an annotation recommendation engine 450 which uses personal data, as well as the reading, ranking, and annotating history of individual users, to produce social graphs relating individual users. The annotation recommendation engine preferably uses Pearson's correlations and/or Euclidean distance algorithms to associate similar tastes and suggest annotations (and further recommended reading) based upon weighted rankings of interests and ratings of similarly tagged documents.
Rankings may also be used in social filtering. The system provides users multiple ways to provide ranking information. A user may rank individual publications, either numerically or by commentary. Users may also rank the usefulness of particular annotations, either numerically or by commentary. All ranking information is stored in the database. The annotation recommendation engine uses the ranking information (and other information) to quantify the pair wise relationship between the viewpoints of any two users. Based on these pair wise quantifications, a user may select annotations from individuals with similar or divergent views to their own.
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Not all annotations must be associated with a particular area or segment of the WBD. Some annotations may instead apply to the entire document, and therefore not be linked to any specific content in the WBD. Given the existence of such annotations, it is still understood that the system provides sets (or subsets) of annotations where each annotation is associated with a particular area or segment of the WBD.
The system typically hosts WBDs available for annotation. This is especially true for content supplied by book, magazine, and educational material publishers. However, the system is also useful for annotation of virtually all WBDs generally available on the internet. To apply the system for annotation of WBDs not originally hosted by the system, a variety of approaches may be employed. In one such approach, the desired WBD is captured and then simply rehosted by the system. In this case, the system operates essentially as described above. Other approaches may also be used to customize annotatability for generally available WBDs.
In one such implementation, a desktop application allows collaborative annotation by a defined internet community. Specific WBDs are selected by members of the community and then rehosted for access by the community. Users may access these WBDs, download the community's collective activity, and then view all associated information (annotations, chat, comments) offline. Modifications made by users offline are later uploaded to enrich the community's store of information.
In another such implementation, the system would not host the WBDs at all. Instead, the system would just store pointers and scaling information regarding a WBD, and then hash any page that a user annotates. When later uses request annotations for the WBD, hashes are compared to see if the WBD has changed.
Social Reading.
Another aspect of the invention includes a system and method allowing for collaborative social reading. While the physical act of reading is typically an individual activity, reading brings people together by providing a context to discuss matters of common interest, whether such matters are factual, historical, educational, speculative, humorous, religious, or any other descriptive category. The present invention provides various ways to connect readers having common interests.
One implementation of social reading includes hosted reading events. Typically an author or expert or teacher leads such an event, which occurs at a scheduled time. The viewer display for the event typically includes live video of the leader, a book or story of interest viewable as a WBD, chat and/or IM boxes, as well as annotation boxes. Participants may interact by annotating the WBD and by posing questions to the leader. Annotations and communications made during the event may be specially flagged so that the annotation filter can later recreate the event. Participants may use the annotation filter during the event to choose messages and annotations from other participants with selected characteristics.
Another implementation of social reading includes reading and annotation of publications by a community of users, where each user participates in the reading and annotation in a largely unstructured fashion. Users may independently choose documents to read, times at which to read them, and the extent that they wish to participate in annotation, messaging and discussion with other community members.
Yet another aspect of social reading involves the formation of book clubs related to particular authors, genres, magazines, artists and other common interests. Such book clubs may be scheduled to meet at regular times, or structured more loosely.
Because the system continually collects personal information from users, another aspect of social reading is to use such information to suggest introductions between users for social, business and romantic purposes.
Virtual Backpacks.
A primary application of the system is in the educational arena. The system allows educational institutions and their students the ability to coordinate textbooks, syllabi, videos, graphics and other materials in an efficient fashion. For each course a student registers for, the appropriate learning materials can be loaded into the student's account, where the student can access them from anywhere. Without a visit to a bookstore or the need to carry heavy textbooks, each student can be equipped with all their study materials. Additionally, the learning experience is enhanced by the ability to share annotations on their assignments with teachers and fellow classmates. Further, the cohort of students in any program can be expanded in time in space. Instead of sharing the learning experience with a single classroom of schoolmates, the community becomes all students studying the same materials regardless of their location. Plus, annotations and guidelines from previous classes are archived and accessible for current students.
Advertising Marketplace.
Yet another aspect of the invention includes an advertising marketplace employing true target marketing. Because the system incorporates demographic profiles of every user, the system can display advertising more likely to be of interest to the user. The advertising model is based on the notion of an electronic billboard (“eBillboard”). The power behind this is that the content of the billboard can change based on who is looking at it. Therefore unlike traditional print media (e.g., print magazines) where the advertising is static, the electronic billboard is dynamic. This allows a new way of selling advertising space based on time. In print media advertising space is sold based on how much space an advertisement takes and the position of the ad in the magazine. The system adds a dimension based on time. Space can be sold based on size, position and how long the ad is actually displayed to the reader. The time dimension may be based on a percentage. For example, if an ad buyer purchases 100% of a particular advertising space in an online publication, their ad will always be displayed. If they purchase 50% of the display time in the same space, their ad will be displayed 50% of the time and other advertising will display the other 50%.
Targeted advertising is enhanced by criteria set by advertisers to direct advertising to the most likely consumers of the advertised products and services. When a publication is added to the system, the publisher fills out a publication profile describing the publication's content as well as the reader base. This provides the system's advertising engine with demographic information on the publication. Additionally, advertising buyers provide demographic information on who the product/service is targeted to. The system's advertising engine then uses this information and compares it to the demographic information associated with the publications to come up with a list of publications that have readers best suited for purchasing the product/service. The ad buyer then selects the publications they want to advertise in and the time percent the add will display. The ad may be an image, video or a Flash file.
Because the system incorporates data regarding each user's social network, the advertising engine also knows who a reader's friends are. The system can then display the same ad to all friends who have similar interests, thereby reinforcing effectiveness of the advertising.
When a reader is looking at a magazine with a page which contains an eBillboard, the advertising engine looks at who purchased the billboard space, matches the reader's demographics to the advertiser's product demographics and displays a suitable ad.
Another final component to the system's advertising capability is custom catalogs. The advertising engine has the ability to generate a custom shopping catalog for every user. This catalog may be delivered to the user's library each month and contains advertisements targeted for just that user.
An affiliate program may also be incorporated. With an affiliate program, users may create their own adds for products which are then served up to their friends. If a sale is made from the ad, the add creator gets a cut. Also, every sale increases the ad's success rating and then the advertising engine expands the ad out to the next level of the social graph.
An advertiser 725 wishing to promote a product or service 727 may initiate an advertising campaign 729. The product or service 727 is associated with a second set of demographics. An advertising display engine (not shown) compares the first and second sets of demographics and determines the most effective ad placements. Because there are multiple products and services to be matched with multiple publications and articles, the advertising display engines may use demographic and other data about individual users to optimize ad placements. As a result, an appropriate advertisement 735 is displayed on the billboard 711. The advertisement may be a static ad 741, a flash ad 742, a video ad 743 or any other multimedia ad (not shown).
Additional System Features.
The invention encompasses a complete integrated system for enhancing learning and education, self-expression, information exchange, social networking and literary commerce. As such, many features may optionally be incorporated into the system. An online bookstore may sell electronic and paper copies of books, magazines, videos, music and the like. The bookstore may present featured titles to users based on user preferences and promotional programs sponsored by publishers. The bookstore may recommend titles based on user tastes and community recommendations. Users may rate, review and comment on various publications. Users may personally organize the content they are interested in. Best seller lists may be compiled. Titles may be displayed with information on how many people are reading them at the moment, past reading histories, and availability of social reading sessions. Free previews may allow users to view selections from items in the bookstore. Certain titles may be made available for free. The system may assist in securing and enforcing intellectual property rights for content providers. Detailed real-time reports may be made available to publishers and other content providers. Publishers and content providers may be provided with web pages to explain themselves. Product bundles, promotions, coupons, subscription cards and the like may be enabled. Personalized catalogs, contact list and directories may be made available. Free promotional items may be provided. Self-publishing services also may be included in the system.
It is an object of the invention to write and save annotations linked to regions of online read only documents such as magazines and books. These annotation-regions can be highlighted. Annotations can be optionally reviewed and ranked by others. Other users' annotations can be imported into documents. Annotations can be filtered by individual, group or ranking (e.g. show annotations of top 5 ranked annotaters). Annotations may be subscribed to. For example, you can read a newspaper with the annotations provided by leading commentators. Annotation types may be introduced—e.g. pros and cons, critics, help, Cliff notes.
It is another object of the invention to provide a forum for social reading events. Groups of users can read a magazine/book simultaneously and interactively; chatting (text, vocal, video) and annotating. Social reading events can be led by authors like book shop reading events. Social networking techniques can be used to form groups of people with shared interests who come together to read collaboratively. Social reading events may be scheduled. Special study groups can be organized.
It is a further object of the invention to expanding the concept of annotations and social reading events beyond text documents. Any content viewable on the web is apt for annotations and social reading.
It is a further object of the invention to detect changes on dynamic pages to detect if the pages are unchanged and therefore if annotations are still relevant. Partial hashing may be used for partially dynamic pages—i.e. the page may be split into portions based on divs, or simple percentages of the individual pages. Then if half the page changes the annotations are still relevant for the other half.
It is a further object of the invention to allow annotations on advertisements, including advertisements on magazines, newspapers, and other periodicals published on the system. Ads may be detected by signature or by hashing images greater than a cut off size.
It is a further object of the invention to provide contextual help to users viewing a particular publication. With large numbers of people highlighting regions of documents and providing annotations it becomes possible to provide a search mechanism that is much simpler than web-wide searches. If a user reads something they don't understand or for which they want more information, they may simply request annotations by clicking or highlighting the area. The user does not need to think up search criteria. This function can be provided even with dynamic web pages given the hashing mechanisms described above.
It is a further object of this invention to provide school reading lists and virtual back packs for students, i.e., students may be provided access to course materials selected by teachers and available for reading, study, and annotations. Schools and universities it may use the system to provide students with pre-packaged reading lists made available in their accounts. Teachers and other education providers may make recommended sets of annotations available to enhance the content of course materials. Additionally, students in particular classes could form groups to maintain their own sets of annotation as a learning aid. Such annotation sets can be maintained for use by subsequent classes.
It is a further object of the invention to help users finding new recommended reading materials based on their similarities with other users. Using information stored in the database, including lists of favorite books and magazine as well as ranking data, a Pearsons correlation or Euclidean distance algorithm or other means can associate similar tastes to suggest reading based upon weighted rankings of interests and ratings of similarly tagged documents.
It is a further object of the invention to create a marketplace where publishers can make their advertising space available to ad buyers. Ad buyers can then easily buy add space across several magazines or other publications.
Social reading, or group reading, of a publication is one of the primary applications of the system. Group reading may be scheduled in advance, and led by a group leader (indicator 90 in
In one aspect, the invention includes a computer-based system for allowing a first user in a community of users to read an annotated web-based document (WBD) and associated annotations. The system comprises a WBD; a plurality of annotations associated with the WBD, where each annotation is associated with one or more filterable fields and where each filterable field may store a description (quality type) related to the annotation or to a second user in the community of users who created the annotation, and where each annotation may be associated with an area of the WBD; and a filter controlled by the first user, where the filter selects one or more annotations from the plurality of annotations based on the instructions of the first user and the information in the filterable fields. The WBD may be hosted on an array of servers. The annotations may be hosted on the same array of servers. The plurality of annotations may be created by the community of users. The WBD may be comprised of one or more pages and each page may have a spatial coordinate system, and one or more annotations may be associated with a set of coordinates in a page of the WBD. The filter may select one or more annotations from the plurality of annotations based upon a set of coordinates chosen by the first user. One or more of the filterable fields may store a ranking generated by the community of users. The ranking may be a ranking of the quality of the annotation. The ranking may be a ranking of the quality of a second user. One or more of the filterable fields may store a defined quality type (description) chosen by the annotator. The quality type may be selected from the group consisting of further explanation, further reading, arguments in favor, arguments against, video, and music. The community may be an educational class of users. The community may be a group of friends. The community may be led by a person who is a leader in the field of the publication. The first user may pay a subscription fee to view the annotations of the leader. The system may further comprise an annotation recommendation engine. The annotation recommendation engine may generate a personality profile based on information supplied by a user. A social graph may created by a pair wise comparison based on information supplied by the first user and another user. The annotation recommendation engine may generate a recommendation based upon a broad selection of all data stored in the system. The area of the WBD associated with an annotation may be displayed as a highlight. The annotation may be concurrently displayed in an annotation box.
In another aspect, the invention is a method for allowing a user to select preferred annotations to view concurrently with a WBD in an online system for collaboratively annotating and reading a WBD. The method comprises providing a set of annotations associated with the WBD, where the annotations are created by individual members in a community of users and where each annotation is associated with one or more descriptions (quality types) in one or more filterable fields, and some of the annotations are also each individually associated with an area of the WBD; allowing a user viewing the WBD to select one or more descriptions in one or more filterable fields; filtering the set of annotations based on the selected quality types to produce a subset of annotations; and displaying a subset of filtered annotations to the user with the WBD. The method may further comprise allowing a user viewing the WBD to select an area of the WBD before filtering. The descriptions may be selected from the group consisting of the identification of the member who created the annotation, ranking data related to the annotation, ranking data related to the member who created the annotation, and affiliations of the member who created the annotation.
In another aspect, the invention includes a method of filtering annotations by a user. In this aspect, in an online system for collaborative annotating and reading of a WBD, the invention is a method for a user to select annotations to view concurrently with the WBD, the method comprising: accessing a server hosting the WBD and a set of annotations associated with the WBD, where the annotations are created by individual members in a community of users and each annotation is associated with one or more descriptions in one or more filterable fields, and each annotation is also associated with an area of the WBD; selecting a WBD and one or more descriptions; and viewing the WBD and the provided annotations. The method may further comprise clicking on an area of the WBD; and viewing an annotation associated with the area of the WBD. The area of the WBD may be highlighted by the system to indicate the existence of an annotation. The descriptions may be selected from the group consisting of the identification of the member who created the annotation, ranking data related to the annotation, ranking data related to the member who created the annotation, and affiliations of the member who created the annotation.
In another aspect, the invention is a method to allow search of a WBD. In this aspect, in an online system for collaboratively annotating and reading a WBD, the invention is a method for allowing a user to select annotations to view concurrently with the WBD, the method comprising: providing a set of annotations associated with the WBD, where the annotations are created by individual members in a community of users and each annotation is associated with one or more descriptions in one or more filterable fields, and each annotation is also associated with an area of the WBD; allowing a user viewing the WBD to select an area of the WBD; and displaying the annotations associated with the area of the WBD. The method may further comprise allowing the user to select one or more descriptions in one or more filterable fields; filtering the set of annotations based on the selected descriptions to produce a subset of annotations; and presenting a subset of filtered annotations to the user with the WBD.
In another aspect, the invention is a method for a user to search a WBD. In this aspect, in an online system for collaboratively annotating and reading of a WBD, the invention is a method for a user to select annotations to view concurrently with the WBD, the method comprising: accessing a server hosting the WBD and a set of annotations associated with the WBD, where the annotations are created by individual members in a community of users and each annotation is associated with one or more descriptions in one or more filterable fields, and each annotation is also associated with an area of the WBD; selecting an area of the WBD; and viewing the WBD and the provided annotations. The method may further comprise selecting one or more descriptions in one or more filterable fields; and viewing the annotations associated with both the area of the WBD and the descriptions.
In another aspect, the invention is a system that allows a user to search a WBD. In this aspect, in a computer-based system for allowing a first user in a community of users to read an annotated web-based document (WBD) and associated annotations, the invention is a system comprising: a WBD; a plurality of annotations associated with the WBD, where each annotation is associated with one or more filterable fields and where each filterable field is capable of storing information related to the annotation or to a second user in the community of users who created the annotation, and where each annotation is associated with an area of the WBD; a viewer that displays the WBD and allows the user to select an area of the WBD; a scaling engine that finds annotations associated with the selected area of the WBD. The system may further comprise a filter controlled by the first user, where the filter selects one or more annotations from the plurality of annotations based on the instructions of the first user and the information in the filterable fields.
In another aspect, the invention is a system that allows a group of people to read and share comments on a WBD. In this aspect, the invention is a system for allowing a plurality of users in a community of users to jointly read and annotate a WBD, the system comprising: a server hosting the WBD; an annotation creation routine, said routine allowing a first user to create an annotation associated with an area of the WBD, said annotation associated with one or more filterable fields where each filterable field may store information related to the annotation or to the first user; and a viewer allowing a second user to view the WBD and the annotation.
In another aspect, the invention is a method for a group of people to read and share comments on a WBD. In this aspect, the invention is a method of simultaneous annotating and reading a WBD by two or more users and a group leader in a community of users, the method comprising: a first user opening the WBD on a first viewer, the document being comprised of one or more pages and each page having a spatial coordinate system; a second user opening the WBD on a second viewer while the first user has the WBD open; the group leader opening the WBD on a third viewer while both the first user and the second user have the WBD open; the group leader communicating to the first user and the second user while the first user and the second user read the document; the first user selecting a set of spacial coordinates on a page of the WBD; and the first user creating an annotation associated with the special coordinates. Communicating by the group leader may be by web-based instant messaging, web-based audio and web-based video. The method may further comprise the second user communicating to the group leader and the first user. Communicating by the group leader may have priority for display on the viewer of the first user over that of the second user.
In another aspect, the invention is a method of introducing people with common reading interests.
In another aspect, the invention is a method of providing online advertising.
In another aspect, the invention is a system for providing online advertising.
In another aspect, the invention is a method of supplying text books.
In another aspect, the invention is a system for providing text books.
While embodiments and applications of this invention have been shown and described, it would be apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of this disclosure that many more modifications than mentioned above are possible without departing from the inventive concepts herein. The invention, therefore, is not to be restricted except in the spirit of the appended claims.
This application claims priority to United Stated provisional patent application No. 61/211,802 entitled “ONLINE DOCUMENT ANNOTATION AND READING SYSTEM” and filed on Apr. 4, 2009; and to United Stated provisional patent application No. 61/270,249 entitled “ONLINE DOCUMENT ANNOTATION AND READING SYSTEM” and filed on Jul. 3, 2009.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61211802 | Apr 2009 | US | |
61270249 | Jul 2009 | US |