Welcome | Sign In
TechNewsWorld.com
Internet

PRODUCT REVIEW
SpaceTime Browser Adds New Dimension to Search

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
SpaceTime Browser Adds New Dimension to Search

SpaceTime, currently in free beta, is a Web browser that promises a 3-D user experience. Looking at search results lists from Google, for instance -- and at the same time scrolling from window to window to view the sites from those search results -- requires some adjustment to my work routine. While I continue to use the 3-D searching environment, though, I am having more fun than I should at work.


An innovative three-dimensional search program puts a unique spin on Internet searching. All results are displayed in a 3-D space that users can navigate and manipulate.

SpaceTime presents all search results, shopping windows and browsing activity in a continuous 3-D stack that merges results to save time and improve browsing efficiency.

SpaceTime released a public beta version of its browser on June 4 as the first step in readying the new searching concept for a future release as a commercial product. Until the unspecified commercial launch, the program will be a free download.

New Approach

Early beta releases rarely impress me. However, since my work as a product reviewer and technology news writer involves countless hours of staring at computer screens, the promise of a 3-D viewing environment on my Windows XP gear was too good to ignore.

Even in its pre-beta release form, SpaceTime delivers on its promise to save me time and provide a revolutionary online searching tool. The browser worked as described. However, looking at search results lists from Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), for instance -- and at the same time scrolling from window to window to view the sites from those search results -- requires some adjustment to my work routine.

While I continue to use the 3-D searching environment, though, I am having more fun than I should at work.

What It Does

SpaceTime puts a three-dimensional front end on the process of Web searching. It can access any Web page as well as any other browser, but its special 3-D search functionality currently works with Google, Google Images, Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO), Yahoo Images, Flickr and eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY). Others will be added, assured SpaceTime CEO and creator Eddie Bakhash.

The SpaceTime interface has three key modes: 3-D Search, 3-D eBay Search, and 3-D Tabbed Browsing. Nothing available today comes close to doing this.

SpaceTime lets users browse eBay listings more like flipping through an electronic catalog of full-sized images. Users can also explore other retail Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse sites in its 3-D space for ease of comparison shopping. Just enter the search term or object sought on eBay to unleash a 3-D thumbnail parade of all objects available. Each object is linked to the text and bidding features.

The SpaceTime 3-D search functionality loads multiple search results as a stack of separate pages. Unlike ordinary search tools, which return a list of links that require clicking one at a time, SpaceTime simultaneously loads 10 results, each in its own window. Using a mouse or keyboard, users can then quickly flip through the results, re-arrange the pages or manipulate them as desired.

New Way to Tab

As cool as it is to search for products and text in 3-D, I was particularly impressed with SpaceTime's tab browsing capabilities. It is much more than what is available with the tabbed browsing feature in Microsoft's (Nasdaq: MSFT) Internet Explorer 7.0 or in the open source Firefox browser.

With SpaceTime, I have an unlimited 3-D space. This lets me map out my browsing progress in a visual time line, treating each Web site as an object that I can manipulate and rearrange within the 3-D environment.

SpaceTime also lets me alternate between 3-D and 2-D perspectives by double clicking on a 3-D display and then clicking the Return button. This process eliminates the hassle of reading and closing pop-up windows and clicking on the Back button. As much as I like the ability in Firefox to open a new tab when I click on a search link, viewing a stack of 10 related search objects in one flexible view leaves all the other two-dimensional browsers in the digital dust.

Perfect Timing

Clearly, this type of product would not have been possible before the rise of Web 2.0. By comparison, Bakhash hints that SpaceTime could be an early window to what lies ahead with Web 3.0 tools.

"This product is eight years in the making," Bakhash told TechNewsWorld. "We see this as a technological achievement. We've watched broadband access improve, so we had to keep adapting before we were able to launch."

Since the inception of the Internet, the process of browsing has been limited and static, noted Bakhash in discussing his view for Web 3.0. Now users can enjoy the richness of the Web with an application that is more interactive, intuitive and fun, he concluded.

"Most computers have high-end graphics and high-speed Internet access. So this is a great opportunity," Bakhash said.

System Requirements

SpaceTime drags all-too-slowly or does not run at all on lesser-powered computer systems. The 3-D browser must be operating on Windows 2000, XP or Vista, have at least 512 MB of RAM, 128 MB of video RAM and processing power provided by either a 2.4 GHz Pentium 4 chip or an AMD (NYSE: AMD) 2400xp+ chip.

Eventually, Bakhash expects SpaceTime to work from any platform. For now, however, it only runs on Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Vista. He is working on a Mac version to be released next 2008, he said.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Jack M. Germain


More by Jack M. Germain

Microsoft FOSSifies .Net Micro Framework
November 18, 2009
Microsoft has declared its .Net Micro framework open source under the Apace 2.0 license. Not all bits of .Net Micro are covered, however. Its TCP/IP stack has been stripped, as has its cryptography libraries. Rights to the TCP/IP stack aren't Redmond's to give, and the cryptography libraries are used outside of the scope of the .Net Micro framework, according to the company.
New Ubuntu OS Features Create Good Karma
November 13, 2009
Amidst the OS upgrades from Apple and Microsoft over the last few months, the Linux OS Ubuntu got a version bump of its own. Ubuntu 9.10, or Karmic Koala, is well worth the effort to upgrade, and its developers have made the process easier -- if you're using the full-sized desktop/notebook version. The Remix version, intended for netbooks, caused quite a few headaches.
Samsung Chimes In With Bada Mobile OS
November 11, 2009
With Android, iPhone, BlackBerry, WinMo, Symbian, WebOS and plenty other mobile platforms fighting for space, is there room for one more? Samsung believes there is, and it's announced a new open mobile platform called "Bada." The company, which already makes handsets for several existing platforms, says Bada will make app-making easy for developers. The first Bada handset should be out in the first half of 2010.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network