Tag Archives: hyperlink

Hyperlinks Weave the Web



Hyperlinks Weave the Web
Originally uploaded by Daniel Greene.

There would be no World Wide Web without hyperlinks. Hyperlinks are what allow us to add photos to web pages, link from one page to another, etc. These days, much of this hyperlinking is done for us automatically on sites such as Flickr. But Flickr also allows you to create hyperlinks yourself in many areas of the site, including photo descriptions, comments, and group threads. I create links between photos and members all the time, and it’s easy for me to do so because I’ve memorized the HTML. Once you learn the HTML for a hyperlink, you can be a hyperlinker yourself!

An HTML tag begins with a less-than sign, created by holding down the shift key while you tap the comma key. Then you type “a” for “anchor” and “href” for “hypertext reference”. Then you type the equals sign (=) followed by a quotation mark. This quotation mark is the beginning of a “container” for the URL, or “uniform resource locator.” The URL is the “web address” for the object to which you are linking. As a mnemonic device, I think of this opening tag as the English phrase, “Anchor hypertext reference is…”

Recently, I posted a photo I took of a fellow Flickrite at a FlickrMeet. Continue reading

Hyper Haiku: Inspired Meditations in Hyperlinked Haiku 俳句

[This page resided at http://danielgreene.com/hyperhaiku/ from 2003–2010 and was written as an assignment for a Hypertext class at National University when I was earning my B.A. in English with a concentration in Communications and Media Study.]

Hyper Haiku 俳句

Inspired Meditations in Hyperlinked Haiku

Purpose:

I created this site to explore the possibilities of hyperlinking haiku poems, knowing that the medium of hypertext would encourage me to free-associate and be more prolific. I am interested in your experience as a reader of these poems. Most poems will offer at least two hyperlinks, so you, the reader, may also free-associate by following the links that most appeal to you. [In this post's new format, please feel free to write a haiku poem as a comment inspired by one of the words in the last commenter's haiku poem.]

What is Hyper Haiku?

Haiku is a poetic form with one stanza of three lines; the first line has five syllables, the second line has seven, and the third line has five. As long as one follows those simple rules, Continue reading