Communications of the ACM
Applications of Video-Content Analysis and Retrieval
IEEE MultiMedia
Advene: active reading through hypervideo
Proceedings of the sixteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
Models for sustaining emergence of practices for hypervideo
SADPI '07 Proceedings of the 2007 international workshop on Semantically aware document processing and indexing
Enhancing social sharing of videos: fragment, annotate, enrich, and share
MM '08 Proceedings of the 16th ACM international conference on Multimedia
Fragment, tag, enrich, and send: Enhancing social sharing of video
ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications (TOMCCAP)
Multimedia Tools and Applications
Vlogging: A survey of videoblogging technology on the web
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Service guidelines of public meeting's webcasts: an experience
ePart'10 Proceedings of the 2nd IFIP WG 8.5 international conference on Electronic participation
Story telling for cultural knowledge sharing
ICWL'10 Proceedings of the 2010 international conference on New horizons in web-based learning
Implementation strategies for efficient media fragment retrieval
Multimedia Tools and Applications
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Today, Web browsers can interpret an enormous amount of different file types, including time-continuous data. By consuming an audio or video, however, the hyperlinking functionality of the Web is "left behind" since these files are typically unsearchable, thus not indexed by common text-based search engines. Our XML-based CMML annotation format and the Annodex file format presented in this paper are designed to solve this problem of "dark matter" on the Internet: Continuous media files are annotated and indexed (i.e., Annodexed), enabling hyperlinks to and from the media. Furthermore, the hyperlinks do not typically point to an entire media file, but to and from arbitrary fragments or intervals. The standards proposed in to create the Continuous Media Web have been submitted to the IETF for review.