Apture Offers The Next Generation In Contextualizing Websites

April 6, 2009 · View Comments

Jason Falls

Jason Falls

Jason Falls

Adding context to one’s web browsing or reading experience is as old as the web itself. The easiest activation of context is the hyperlink. If you want to know more about, say, Bruce Springsteen, and the author of the article takes the time to add a hyperlink to the Bruce Springsteen bio on Wikipedia, as I did here, the article offers more context and, thus, a more enriching experience.

But adding links takes time for the author. Not just time to add the code or use the convenient WYSIWYG link adder, but to find the right article, website or resource to use as context. It also means that the website visitor will have to leave your page (or at least look at the contextual content in a new window) which takes the focus off your blog or website.

Zemanta, one of my favorite blogging tools, took a step toward solving half of that problem with their tool. It offers up one-click link options to various keywords presented in your copy. Often, it will offer option to link the words, “Bruce Springsteen,” to the Wikipedia page or perhaps even The Boss’s website. That, coupled with Zemanta’s other tools, which I’ve written about here, make it very useful for bloggers.

But now the other half of that equation – taking traffic and focus away from your blog or website – has been solved. Now, using a plugin for your blogging software or content management system, you can offer up context, including images, videos and other multimedia, via hyperlink-like functionality, but right there on your website without losing visitors.

Image representing Apture as depicted in Crunc...
Image via CrunchBase

Apture is an amazing new plugin that you can add to WordPress, Blogger, Moveable Type or Typepad blogs, or customize the functionality for different content management systems. It allows you to add Zemanta-like contextual links, but brings that content to your website in a pop-up window. Go ahead and click on or roll over any of the following: Bruce Springsteen in concert; Pittsburgh Pirates spring training; Kipp Bodnar and Wayne Sutton’s Social Web podcast.

Or try this one on for size: When I link to someone’s Twitter stream, like say, @LizStrauss, the tool brings up Liz’s stream in the pop-up without you ever having to leave Social Media Explorer. You can immediately see what someone is talking about on Twitter. If you’re blogging about a certain conference or topic with a hashtag, say, #sxsw, your visitors can see the latest in that conversation with a click.

(Click on a few of these links to experience it. Leave the window open if you want or close it out.)

You never leave SME. You also get a more contextual experience around this post and have a plethora of multimedia available to you in your visit here. While I will say I don’t like the roll-over-enabled pop-ups, it’s still pretty impressive. I’d like for the roll-over pop-ups to go away if I roll off, or just have the pop-ups only appear if I click. But that’s my personal preference. Perhaps Apture will add a setting (I didn’t see one) to enable that preference per user.

(For those of you with a not-so-tech-savvy audience, it makes you look like a web wizard or big-time publishing house.)

Speaking of big-time publishing houses, Apture is currently deployed on The Washington Post, BBC News and SF Gate (the San Francisco Chronicle online), among others. It gives those online publishing outlets a more engaging experience for their readers which is certainly something the traditional media outlets can use in the online space.

You can even set it to enable a Wiki mode and have your visitors allowed to edit your website. (Not on your life. Heh.)

The installation is fairly simple. You add the plugin (which for me required a download, unzip, FTP the files, then activate in WordPress), install a script in your blog’s footer, which Apture conveniently does for you if you want, then start using it.

Because your link options are based on search, the actual implementation of the links using the tool in your site’s admin can be a little slow and clunky. Zemanta’s links are on-click. But the functionality you get is a much better.

But here’s a real differentiator: If you’re logged in to your website’s admin and simply browsing the actual page, Apture’s tool allows you to highlight a word and add contextual links as you see the page – you don’t even have to be in the admin to add the context. It creeped me out at first, but when I started browsing back through old posts and popping in links left and right, I liked it. A lot. In fact, that functionality might be better for adding links than using the interface in the admin tool. (Strange they’d be different, but they seem to be.)

You will have to sign up for an account (free) at Apture and make sure the tool is talking to your website or blog, but the instructions are easy to follow and it doesn’t take much effort to make it all work.

Just to clarify, Apture takes the contextual practice of linking to a whole new level. In that sense, it is Zemanta on crack. However, Zemanta still offer better ease of use (one-click linking), embeds images with one click (like the Apture logo above) and performs searches (either semantic or manual) to offer related articles to link to from your post. I’ve used both Apture and Zemanta tools on this post to take advantage of the strengths of both.

And if you’d like to add context, multimedia and a more enriching experience to your website or blog, I’d recommend you do the same.

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{ 2 trackbacks }

Apture, An Open Window into the Web of the Future | Carlos Lorenzo
April 24, 2009 at 12:29 pm
Apture Prevents “Flight to Google,” Adds 5-10 Minutes to Page Views | QC Central
September 27, 2009 at 7:33 am

{ 64 comments… read them below or add one }

JasonFalls April 7, 2009 at 12:03 pm

You're welcome. We aim to please. Let us know what you think of it after some use.

Reply

JasonFalls April 7, 2009 at 12:03 pm

You're welcome. We aim to please. Let us know what you think of it after some use.

Reply

JasonFalls April 7, 2009 at 12:03 pm

Always a sound approach, Stuart. Let us know what you tinker with and how it works for you once you have.

Reply

JasonFalls April 7, 2009 at 12:03 pm

Always a sound approach, Stuart. Let us know what you tinker with and how it works for you once you have.

Reply

kansteven April 7, 2009 at 1:09 pm

RT @tristanharris: Great review of Apture by @jasonfalls on SocialMediaExplorer! http://bit.ly/2B5rB

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

Reply

apture April 7, 2009 at 1:37 pm

RT @tristanharris: Great review of Apture by @jasonfalls on SocialMediaExplorer! http://bit.ly/2B5rB

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

Reply

LadyLeeT April 7, 2009 at 1:49 pm

RT @apture RT @tristanharris: Great review of Apture by @jasonfalls on SocialMediaExplorer! http://bit.ly/2B5rB

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

Reply

DolphinDancer April 7, 2009 at 2:45 pm

Anyone else who hasn’t seen it yet – http://tinyurl.com/dbfcuw – take a look at these two progs, blog assistants – I feel you will like

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

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Tristan April 7, 2009 at 9:43 pm

Hi Danny,

We chose not to make the links close automatically because we wanted to let users could dig multiple layers deep without worrying about moving their mouse too far and accidentally cause the window to close. We also saw that the mouse-over and mouse-away are especially bad for people with trackpads and trackpoints, of an increasingly laptop-bound web audience. Unlike a lot of other services you see on the web that use the mouse-out event to hide the window, readers use Apture to really engage, read, and consume the content in the windows, because it's high-quality stuff the author of the post chose for them to see.

That said, we really pay attention to user experience – and we built several shortcuts to close an Apture window more conveniently:

1) You can click on the link that launched the window in the first place (you'll notice the links icon has been replaced with a small (x)).

2) You can click anywhere on the body of the page to dismiss the last window you opened.

3) You can double-click anywhere on the body of the page to dismiss ALL Apture windows you opened.

Think of it as a stack, each window you are opening is added to a stack. And each time you click on the page background, you are closing one window off that stack. Double-clicking gets you back to where you were before.

Hope this is helpful! We'd love to hear more feedback from you, so shoot us an email at contact AT apture DOT com.

Reply

Tristan April 7, 2009 at 9:43 pm

Hi Danny,

We chose not to make the links close automatically because we wanted to let users could dig multiple layers deep without worrying about moving their mouse too far and accidentally cause the window to close. We also saw that the mouse-over and mouse-away are especially bad for people with trackpads and trackpoints, of an increasingly laptop-bound web audience. Unlike a lot of other services you see on the web that use the mouse-out event to hide the window, readers use Apture to really engage, read, and consume the content in the windows, because it's high-quality stuff the author of the post chose for them to see.

That said, we really pay attention to user experience – and we built several shortcuts to close an Apture window more conveniently:

1) You can click on the link that launched the window in the first place (you'll notice the links icon has been replaced with a small (x)).

2) You can click anywhere on the body of the page to dismiss the last window you opened.

3) You can double-click anywhere on the body of the page to dismiss ALL Apture windows you opened.

Think of it as a stack, each window you are opening is added to a stack. And each time you click on the page background, you are closing one window off that stack. Double-clicking gets you back to where you were before.

Hope this is helpful! We'd love to hear more feedback from you, so shoot us an email at contact AT apture DOT com.

Reply

rscionti April 8, 2009 at 12:54 pm

Apture is extremely cool http://bit.ly/3kpKd9

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

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