Discussion with JumpKnowledge Founder, Yaakov Sash

Last week I had the opportunity to speak with Yaakov Sash, founder of New York-based JumpKnowledge (JK). JumpKnowledge is an annotation tool for the Web and from the demo it's pretty groovy. The initial launch was in May 2007 and there are some overviews here and here.

The idea with JK is simple: you can add your own thoughts an ideas (i.e. annotations) to any web page. JK saves a copy of the page and then allows you to begin annotating it as you like. There is a button for the Google toolbar and a Firefox plugin to make using JK easy.

Once you have completed your annotations, the system saves it for a week and provides you with a link that can be shared. In addition, the updated page can be shared on social networking tools and emailed as well.

Yaakov mentioned that he is contacting newspapers and magazines where the tool could be a huge hit. Imagine a team manager annotating a story from the New York Times and then sending it to his/her team rather than sending the story link plus an email pointing to several sections of the article. Or for a teacher/professor – this could be an excellent tool in the classroom.

My suggestion for Yaakov is to implement a public gallery of the pages created using JumpKnowledge. This could be a massive gallery and would allow each person to have their thoughts about an article or post. Similar to the new Google News tool.

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1 COMMENTS
  1. Yaakov Sash says:

    Hi,

    I just wanted to give a shout out to all the website owners out there that we recently launched a Button Wizard to make it really simple to add an Annotate Button to your website.

    Why Annotations?

  2. People take pride in their own words and JumpKnowledge lets their observations stand out.
  3. It is easy and fun for people to add comments anywhere to the page.
  4. Because annotations are added directly to the web page, everyone who reads it will experience your site as a full-blown full-body experience.
  5. Here’s an example of an annotation button (as a link):

    Annotate Page

    Try clicking the button link above–it really works.

    The button took only two minutes to create and it will automatically work for every page in your site. Don’t forget to check out the Button Wizard which has tons of configuration options.

    Here’s an example of how an annotation looks once it’s created:
    http://jkn.com/View?j=839295.722711836317&u=244342251754&t=12

    Yaakov Sash
    Founder, jkn.com

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