Volume 1 of Open Journal of Web Technologies(OJWT), ISSN 2199-188X http://www.ronpub.com/index.php/journals/OJWT/issues?volume=1&issue=ALL All papers of this volume en-us Martin Hoernig, Andreas Bigontina and Bernd Radig: A Comparative Evaluation of Current HTML5 Web Video Implementations, Open Journal of Web Technologies (OJWT), 1 (2), pages 1-9, URN: urn:nbn:de:101:1-201705291328, 2014 https://www.ronpub.com/ojwt/OJWT-v1i2n01_Hoernig.html http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:101:1-201705291328 HTML5 video is the upcoming standard for playing videos on the World Wide Web. Although its specification has not been fully adopted yet, all major browsers provide the HTML5 video element and web developers already rely on its functionality. But there are differences between implementations and inaccuracies that trouble the web developer community. To help to improve the current situation we draw a comparison between the most important web browsers. We focus on the event mechanism, since it is essential for interacting with the video element. Furthermore, we compare the seeking accuracy, which is relevant for more specialized applications. Our tests reveal varieties of differences between browser interfaces and show that even simple software solutions may still need third-party plugins in today's browsers. Arne Kusserow and Sven Groppe: Getting Indexed by Bibliographic Databases in the Area of Computer Science, Open Journal of Web Technologies (OJWT), 1 (2), pages 10-27, URN: urn:nbn:de:101:1-201705291343, 2014 https://www.ronpub.com/ojwt/OJWT_2014v1i2n02_Kusserow.html http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:101:1-201705291343 Every author and publisher is interested in adding their publications to the widely used bibliographic databases freely accessible in the world wide web: This ensures the visibility of their publications and hence of the published research. However, the inclusion requirements of publications in the bibliographic databases are heterogeneous even on the technical side. This survey paper aims in shedding light on the various data formats, protocols and technical requirements of getting indexed by widely used bibliographic databases in the area of computer science and provides hints for maximal database inclusion. Furthermore, we point out the possibilities to utilize the data of bibliographic databases, and describes some personal and institutional research repository systems with special regard to the support of inclusion in bibliographic databases. Marco Furini and Simone Montangero: SIWeb: understanding the Interests of the Society through Web data Analysis, Open Journal of Web Technologies (OJWT), 1 (1), pages 1-14, URN: urn:nbn:de:101:1-201705291334, 2014 https://www.ronpub.com/ojwt/OJWT-v1i1n01_Furini.html http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:101:1-201705291334 The high availability of user-generated contents in the Web scenario represents a tremendous asset for understanding various social phenomena. Methods and commercial products that exploit the widespread use of the Web as a way of conveying personal opinions have been proposed, but a critical thinking is that these approaches may produce a partial, or distorted, understanding of the society, because most of them focus on definite scenarios, use specific platforms, base their analysis on the sole magnitude of data, or treat the different Web resources with the same importance. In this paper, we present SIWeb (Social Interests through Web Analysis), a novel mechanism designed to measure the interest the society has on a topic (e.g., a real world phenomenon, an event, a person, a thing). SIWeb is general purpose (it can be applied to any decision making process), cross platforms (it uses the entire Webspace, from social media to websites, from tags to reviews), and time effective (it measures the time correlatio between the Web resources). It uses fractal analysis to detect the temporal relations behind all the Web resources (e.g., Web pages, RSS, newsgroups, etc.) that talk about a topic and combines this number with the temporal relations to give an insight of the the interest the society has about a topic. The evaluation of the proposal shows that SIWeb might be helpful in decision making processes as it reflects the interests the society has on a specific topic. Marios Belk, Panagiotis Germanakos, Efi Papatheocharous, Panayiotis Andreou and George Samaras: Integrating Human Factors and Semantic Mark-ups in Adaptive Interactive Systems, Open Journal of Web Technologies (OJWT), 1 (1), pages 15-26, URN: urn:nbn:de:101:1-2017052611313, 2014 https://www.ronpub.com/ojwt/OJWT-v1i1n02_Belk.html http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:101:1-2017052611313 This paper focuses on incorporating individual differences in cognitive processing and semantic mark-ups in the context of adaptive interactive systems. In particular, a semantic Web-based adaptation framework is proposed that enables Web content providers to enrich content and functionality of Web environments with semantic mark-ups. The Web content is created using a Web authoring tool and is further processed and reconstructed by an adaptation mechanism based on cognitive factors of users. Main aim of this work is to investigate the added value of personalising content and functionality of Web environments based on the unique cognitive characteristics of users. Accordingly, a user study has been conducted that entailed a psychometric-based survey for extracting the users' cognitive characteristics, combined with a real usage scenario of an existing commercial Web environment that was enriched with semantic mark-ups and personalised based on different adaptation effects. The paper provides interesting insights in the design and development of adaptive interactive systems based on cognitive factors and semantic mark-ups.