Searches involving multiple websites can quickly get confusing, particularly when
performed on a mobile device with a small screen. A new web browser developed
at Carnegie Mellon University
now brings order to complex searches in a way not possible with conventional
tabbed browsing.
TheBento browser, inspired by compartmentalized bento lunch boxes popular in Japan , stores
each search session as a project
workspace that keeps track of the most interesting or relevant parts of visited
web pages. It's not necessary for a user to keep every site open to avoid
losing information.
"With
Bento, we're structuring the entire experience through these projects,"
said
Aniket Kittur, associate professor in the Human-Computer Interaction Institute (HCII). The projects are stored for later use, can be handed off to others, or can be moved to different devices. "This is a new way to browse that eliminates the tab overload that limits the usefulness of conventionalbrowsers."
Aniket Kittur, associate professor in the Human-Computer Interaction Institute (HCII). The projects are stored for later use, can be handed off to others, or can be moved to different devices. "This is a new way to browse that eliminates the tab overload that limits the usefulness of conventionalbrowsers."
Someone
planning a trip to Alaska
with a conventional browser, for instance, might create multiple tabs for each
location or point of interest, as well as additional tabs for hotels,
restaurants and activities. With Bento, users can identify pages they found
useful, trash unhelpful pages and keep track of what they have read on each
page. Bento also bundles the search result pages into task cards, such as
accommodations, day trips, transportation, etc. The project could be shared
with other people planning their own trips.
Kittur's
research team will present a report on their mobile web browser at CHI 2018,
the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, April 21-26 in Montreal , Canada .
A research version of the Bento Browser for iPhones is available for download
from the App Store.
Mobile
devices now initiate more web searches than do desktop computers. Yet the
limitations of conventional browsers become more acute on mobile devices. Not only
is screen size limited, but mobile users are more often interrupted and
distracted and have more difficulty saving and organizing information, said
Nathan Hahn, a Ph.D. student in HCII.
In user
studies that compared Bento with the Safari browser, users said they preferred
Bento in cases where they wanted to continue a search later and wanted to pick
up where they left off. They also said Bento kept their searches better
organized. Though most participants found it easier to learn how to use Safari,
they found Bento more useful for finding pages and believed that Bento made
their mobile searches more effective.
"If
we get a lot of people using it, Bento could serve as a microscope to study how
people make sense of information," Kittur said, noting people who use the
research version are asked to consent to their searches becoming part of the
research data. "This might lead to a new type of artificial
intelligence," he added.
Bento
Browser is now a search app for iPhones, but its capabilities for organizing
searches and helping people resume searches also could benefit people using
desktop computers. To accommodate those users, Kittur's team is now preparing aBento plug-in for the Chrome browser.
No comments:
Post a Comment