U.S. patent application number 13/901880 was filed with the patent office on 2014-11-20 for relevant commentary for media content.
The applicant listed for this patent is International Business Machines Corporation. Invention is credited to Michal Broz, Bernadette A. Carter, Melba I. Lopez, Matthew G. Marum.
Application Number | 20140344359 13/901880 |
Document ID | / |
Family ID | 51896673 |
Filed Date | 2014-11-20 |
United States Patent
Application |
20140344359 |
Kind Code |
A1 |
Broz; Michal ; et
al. |
November 20, 2014 |
RELEVANT COMMENTARY FOR MEDIA CONTENT
Abstract
Methods, products, apparatuses, and systems may provide and/or
receive relevant commentary for media content. Additionally, the
relevant commentary may be provided and/or received in response to
rendering a section of the media content. In addition, the relevant
commentary may be provided and/or received based on one or more of
a preference for a temporal perspective, a preference for a
viewpoint, and/or a preference for a state of a social network.
Moreover, the relevant commentary may be provided and/or received
based on a topic related to the section of the media content. The
relevant commentary may be provided and/or received based on an
authorship independent of a media content access event by an author
of the relevant commentary. In addition, an ambiguous section of
the media content may be clarified, and/or an interactive
commentary session may be simulated.
Inventors: |
Broz; Michal; (Austin,
TX) ; Carter; Bernadette A.; (Durham, NC) ;
Lopez; Melba I.; (Austin, TX) ; Marum; Matthew
G.; (Cary, NC) |
|
Applicant: |
Name |
City |
State |
Country |
Type |
International Business Machines Corporation |
Armonk |
NY |
US |
|
|
Family ID: |
51896673 |
Appl. No.: |
13/901880 |
Filed: |
May 24, 2013 |
Related U.S. Patent Documents
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Application
Number |
Filing Date |
Patent Number |
|
|
13896489 |
May 17, 2013 |
|
|
|
13901880 |
|
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Current U.S.
Class: |
709/204 |
Current CPC
Class: |
H04L 51/32 20130101;
G06F 15/17306 20130101; G06Q 50/01 20130101; H04L 67/10
20130101 |
Class at
Publication: |
709/204 |
International
Class: |
H04L 29/08 20060101
H04L029/08 |
Claims
1. A method comprising: detecting a media content access event by a
user; and providing relevant commentary to the user in response to
rendering a section of the media content, wherein at least a
portion of the relevant commentary is based on two or more of a
preference for a temporal perspective, a preference for a
viewpoint, and a preference for a state of a social network.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising: providing initial
commentary to the user related to the section; receiving user
commentary in response to the initial commentary; and providing at
least a portion of the relevant commentary based on the user
commentary.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising: providing at least a
portion of the relevant commentary based on a topic related to the
section of the media content; providing at least a portion of the
relevant commentary based on an authorship independent of a media
content access event by an author of the relevant commentary;
clarifying an ambiguous section of the media content; and
simulating an interactive commentary session.
4. A method comprising: receiving relevant commentary in response
to rendering a section of media content, wherein at least a portion
of the relevant commentary is based on a preference for a temporal
perspective.
5. The method of claim 4, further comprising: receiving initial
commentary related to the section; providing user commentary in
response to the initial commentary; and receiving at least a
portion of the relevant commentary based on the user
commentary.
6. The method of claim 4, further comprising: receiving at least a
portion of the relevant commentary based on a preference for a
viewpoint related to the section of the media content; receiving at
least a portion of the relevant commentary based on a preference
for a state of a social network; receiving at least a portion of
the relevant commentary based on a topic related to the section of
the media content; receiving at least a portion of the relevant
commentary based on an authorship independent of a media content
access event by an author of the relevant commentary; clarifying an
ambiguous section of the media content; and simulating an
interactive commentary session.
7. A method comprising: providing relevant commentary to a user in
response to rendering a section of media content, wherein at least
a portion of the relevant commentary is based on a preference for a
temporal perspective.
8. The method of claim 7, further comprising: providing initial
commentary to the user related to the section; receiving user
commentary in response to the initial commentary; and providing at
least a portion of the relevant commentary based the user
commentary.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the media content and the initial
commentary are from a past time period, the user commentary is from
a present time period, and the portion of the relevant commentary
is from the past time period based on the preference for a past
perspective.
10. The method of claim 8, wherein the media content is from a past
time period, the initial commentary and the user commentary are
from a present time period, and the portion of the relevant
commentary is from the present time period based on the preference
for a present perspective.
11. The method of claim 7, wherein the portion of the relevant
commentary is from a present time period and a past time period
based on the preference for a present perspective and a past
perspective.
12. The method of claim 7, wherein at least a portion of the
relevant commentary is provided based on a preference for a
viewpoint related to the section.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the viewpoint is derived from
one or more of a user statement, user history information, and the
section of the media content.
14. The method of claim 12, wherein the relevant commentary is
provided based on one or more of a viewpoint agreement, a viewpoint
disagreement, and a viewpoint neutrality.
15. The method of claim 7, wherein at least a portion of the
relevant commentary is provided based on a preference for a state
of a social network.
16. The method of claim 7, wherein at least a portion of the
relevant commentary is provided based on a topic to be related to
the section of the media content.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the topic is derived from a
comment expressed by one or more of the user and the media
content.
18. The method of claim 7, wherein at least a portion of the
relevant commentary is provided based on an authorship independent
of a media content access event by an author of the relevant
commentary.
19. The method of claim 7, further comprising clarifying an
ambiguous section of the media content.
20. The method of claim 7, further comprising simulating an
interactive commentary session.
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent
application Ser. No. 13/896,489 filed on May 17, 2013.
BACKGROUND
[0002] Embodiments of the present invention generally relate to
relevant commentary for media content. More particularly,
embodiments relate to providing (and/or receiving) relevant
commentary for media content based on a preference, such as a
preference for one or more of a temporal perspective, a viewpoint,
and/or a state of a social network.
[0003] Commentary for media content may be provided to users of the
media content. For example, the commentary may include a list of
posts associated with a video or a log of a conversation that has
taken place between two or more users. Social media buzz may also
be presented alongside television media content. The commentary,
however, may fail to adequately take into consideration a number of
factors such as temporal perspective and viewpoint.
BRIEF SUMMARY
[0004] Embodiments may include a method involving providing
relevant commentary to a user. The method may include providing
relevant commentary to the user in response to rendering a section
of media content. In addition, at least a portion of the relevant
commentary may be based on a preference, such as a preference for a
temporal perspective.
[0005] Embodiments may include a method involving receiving
relevant commentary. The method may include receiving relevant
commentary in response to rendering a section of media content. In
addition, at least a portion of the relevant commentary may be
based on a preference, such as a preference for a temporal
perspective.
[0006] Embodiments may include a method involving detecting a media
content access event by a user. The method may include providing
relevant commentary to the user in response to rendering a section
of media content. In addition, at least a portion of the relevant
commentary may be based on a preference, such as two or more of a
preference for a temporal perspective, a preference for a
viewpoint, and a preference for a state of a social network.
[0007] Embodiments may include a method involving providing (and/or
receiving) at least a portion of the relevant commentary based on a
topic related to the section of the media content. The method may
include providing (and/or receiving) at least a portion of the
relevant commentary based on an authorship independent of a media
content access event by an author of the relevant commentary. In
addition, the method may include clarifying an ambiguous section of
the media content. Moreover, the method may include simulating an
interactive commentary session.
[0008] Embodiments may include a computer program product having a
computer readable storage medium and computer usable code stored on
the computer readable storage medium. If executed by a processor,
the computer usable code may cause a computer to provide relevant
commentary to a user. The computer usable code, if executed, may
also cause a computer to provide relevant commentary to the user in
response to a render of a section of media content. The computer
usable code, if executed, may also cause a computer to cause at
least a portion of the relevant commentary to be based on a
preference, such as a preference for a temporal perspective.
[0009] Embodiments may include a computer program product having a
computer readable storage medium and computer usable code stored on
the computer readable storage medium. If executed by a processor,
the computer usable code may cause a computer to receive relevant
commentary. The computer usable code, if executed, may also cause a
computer to receive relevant commentary in response to a render of
a section of media content. The computer usable code, if executed,
may also cause a computer to cause at least a portion of the
relevant commentary to be based on a preference, such as a
preference for a temporal perspective.
[0010] Embodiments may include a computer program product having a
computer readable storage medium and computer usable code stored on
the computer readable storage medium. If executed by a processor,
the computer usable code may cause a computer to detect a media
content access event by a user. The computer usable code, if
executed, may also cause a computer to provide relevant commentary
to the user in response to a render of a section of the media
content. The computer usable code, if executed, may also cause a
computer to cause at least a portion of the relevant commentary to
be based on a preference, such as two or more of a preference for a
temporal perspective, a preference for a viewpoint, and a
preference for a state of a social network.
[0011] Embodiments may include a computer program product having a
computer readable storage medium and computer usable code stored on
the computer readable storage medium. If executed by a processor,
the computer usable code may cause a computer to cause at least a
portion of the relevant commentary to be based on a topic to be
related to the section of the media content. If executed, computer
usable code may cause at least a portion of the relevant commentary
to be based on an authorship independent of a media content access
event by an author of the relevant commentary. The computer usable
code, if executed, may cause a computer to clarify an ambiguous
section of the media content. The computer usable code, if
executed, may cause a computer to simulate an interactive
commentary session.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012] The various advantages of the embodiments of the present
invention will become apparent to one skilled in the art by reading
the following specification and appended claims, and by referencing
the following drawings, in which:
[0013] FIGS. 1A to 1C are block diagrams of examples of schemes of
providing (and/or receiving) relevant commentary in response to
rendering a section of media content according to an
embodiment;
[0014] FIG. 2 is a block diagram of an example of an architecture
including logic to provide (and/or receive) relevant commentary in
response to a render of a section of media content according to an
embodiment;
[0015] FIG. 3 is a block diagram of an example of an architecture
including a variation in logic to provide (and/or receive) relevant
commentary in response to a render of a section of media content
according to an embodiment;
[0016] FIG. 4 is a flowchart of an example of a method of providing
(and/or receiving) relevant commentary in response to rendering a
section of media content according to an embodiment; and
[0017] FIG. 5 is a block diagram of an example of a computing
device according to an embodiment.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0018] As will be appreciated by one skilled in the art, aspects of
the present invention may be embodied as a system, method or
computer program product. Accordingly, aspects of the present
invention may take the form of an entirely hardware embodiment, an
entirely software embodiment (including firmware, resident
software, micro-code, etc.) or an embodiment combining software and
hardware aspects that may all generally be referred to herein as a
"circuit," "module" or "system." Furthermore, aspects of the
present invention may take the form of a computer program product
embodied in one or more computer readable medium(s) having computer
readable program code embodied thereon.
[0019] Any combination of one or more computer readable medium(s)
may be utilized. The computer readable medium may be a computer
readable signal medium or a computer readable storage medium. A
computer readable storage medium may be, for example, but not
limited to, an electronic, magnetic, optical, electromagnetic,
infrared, or semiconductor system, apparatus, or device, or any
suitable combination of the foregoing. More specific examples (a
non-exhaustive list) of the computer readable storage medium would
include the following: an electrical connection having one or more
wires, a portable computer diskette, a hard disk, a random access
memory (RAM), a read-only memory (ROM), an erasable programmable
read-only memory (EPROM or Flash memory), an optical fiber, a
portable compact disc read-only memory (CD-ROM), an optical storage
device, a magnetic storage device, or any suitable combination of
the foregoing. In the context of this document, a computer readable
storage medium may be any tangible medium that can contain, or
store a program for use by or in connection with an instruction
execution system, apparatus, or device.
[0020] A computer readable signal medium may include a propagated
data signal with computer readable program code embodied therein,
for example, in baseband or as part of a carrier wave. Such a
propagated signal may take any of a variety of forms, including,
but not limited to, electro-magnetic, optical, or any suitable
combination thereof. A computer readable signal medium may be any
computer readable medium that is not a computer readable storage
medium and that can communicate, propagate, or transport a program
for use by or in connection with an instruction execution system,
apparatus, or device.
[0021] Program code embodied on a computer readable medium may be
transmitted using any appropriate medium, including but not limited
to wireless, wireline, optical fiber cable, RF, etc., or any
suitable combination of the foregoing.
[0022] Computer program code for carrying out operations for
aspects of the present invention may be written in any combination
of one or more programming languages, including an object oriented
programming language such as Java, Smalltalk, C++ or the like and
conventional procedural programming languages, such as the "C"
programming language or similar programming languages. The program
code may execute entirely on the user's computer, partly on the
user's computer, as a stand-alone software package, partly on the
user's computer and partly on a remote computer or entirely on the
remote computer or server. In the latter scenario, the remote
computer may be connected to the user's computer through any type
of network, including a local area network (LAN) or a wide area
network (WAN), or the connection may be made to an external
computer (for example, through the Internet using an Internet
Service Provider).
[0023] Aspects of the present invention are described below with
reference to flowchart illustrations and/or block diagrams of
methods, apparatus (systems) and computer program products
according to embodiments of the invention. It will be understood
that each block of the flowchart illustrations and/or block
diagrams, and combinations of blocks in the flowchart illustrations
and/or block diagrams, can be implemented by computer program
instructions. These computer program instructions may be provided
to a processor of a general purpose computer, special purpose
computer, or other programmable data processing apparatus to
produce a machine, such that the instructions, which execute via
the processor of the computer or other programmable data processing
apparatus, create means for implementing the functions/acts
specified in the flowchart and/or block diagram block or
blocks.
[0024] These computer program instructions may also be stored in a
computer readable medium that can direct a computer, other
programmable data processing apparatus, or other devices to
function in a particular manner, such that the instructions stored
in the computer readable medium produce an article of manufacture
including instructions which implement the function/act specified
in the flowchart and/or block diagram block or blocks.
[0025] The computer program instructions may also be loaded onto a
computer, other programmable data processing apparatus, or other
devices to cause a series of operational steps to be performed on
the computer, other programmable apparatus or other devices to
produce a computer implemented process such that the instructions
which execute on the computer or other programmable apparatus
provide processes for implementing the functions/acts specified in
the flowchart and/or block diagram block or blocks.
[0026] When faced with a media access event (e.g., a video access
request), it may be valuable to augment a user experience by
providing commentary (e.g., feeds of posts, news articles, blog
posts, etc.), such as commentary generated when the media content
was originally broadcasted (e.g., posted, published, etc.). It may
also be valuable to augment the user experience by filtering the
commentary according to a preference, such as a preference for a
temporal perspective, a viewpoint, and/or a state of a social
network. Additionally, the user experience may be augmented by
providing past commentary (e.g., commentary made at a time of a
past original broadcast, commentary made at a time before the past
original broadcast, etc.) and/or present commentary (e.g.,
commentary made at a time of a present original broadcast, at a
time that a user watches a broadcast replay in the present, etc.),
which may be related to a topic (e.g., a topic addressed in the
media content). Augmenting the user experience may also involve
providing an opportunity to enter commentary (e.g., post), which
may be shared with a social network and/or used to tailor the user
experience. In addition, ambiguous media content may be clarified
and/or made the subject of a simulated interactive commentary
session.
[0027] Referring now to FIGS. 1A to 1C, schemes 6, 8 and 10 are
shown of providing (and/or receiving) relevant commentary in
response to rendering a section of media content according to an
embodiment. The commentary and/or the media content may include any
information that may be generated, processed, stored, retrieved,
rendered, and/or exchanged in electronic form. Examples of the
commentary and/or the media content may include audio, video,
images, text, hypertext links, graphics, and so on, or combinations
thereof. In one example, the commentary may include a post, a
ranking, an instant message, a chat, an email, polling data, and so
on, or combinations thereof. In another example, the media content
may include a video, a song, a television program, a picture, and
so on, or combinations thereof.
[0028] The commentary and/or the media content may refer to a
section thereof. For example, the section of the commentary may
include one or more comments from among a string of comments by the
same or different individual. The section of the commentary and/or
of the media content may include a frame of a video, an area of an
image, a segment of audio, a domain of a hypertext link, a chapter
of a book, a paragraph of an article, and so on, or combinations
thereof. The commentary and/or the media content may include a live
(e.g., real-time) communication, a recorded communication, and so
on, or combinations thereof. Accordingly, a media content access
event may include generating, processing, storing, retrieving,
rendering, and/or exchanging information in electronic form.
[0029] In the illustrated example of FIG. 1A, the scheme 6 may
include a computing device 12 having a media render portion 14 to
display media content (e.g., video). Accordingly, a media content
access event (e.g., a video access event) may involve launching a
media player application, launching a web browser, retrieving the
media content from storage, receiving the media content from an
image capture device (e.g., on or off-device camera), rendering
(e.g., displaying) the media content, and so on, or combinations
thereof. The media content access event may be detected by the
computing device 10 itself, by a remote computing device (e.g.,
off-platform remote server, off site remote server, etc., not
shown), and so on, or combinations thereof. The media content
displayed in the media render portion 14 may include a beginning
section (e.g., first minutes of a video, introduction section,
first chapter of a book, etc.), an intermediate section (e.g., any
time between the beginning and end of the media content), a final
section (e.g., final minutes of the video, final paragraph of an
article, etc.), and so on, or combinations thereof. The media
content displayed in the media render portion 14 may also include a
plurality of stacked media content (e.g., videos, text, images,
etc.), which may be completely overlaid, staggered, side-by-side,
and so on, or combinations thereof. At time T1, a video may be
displayed in the media render portion 14 of a debate between
candidates 18, 20, which may include a live communication (e.g.,
present original broadcast), a recorded communication (e.g., past
original broadcast), and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0030] The computing device 12 may also include a commentary render
portion 16 to display commentary. The commentary may be separate
from the media content, the commentary may be overlaid with the
media content using varying degrees of transparency among the media
render portion 14 and the commentary render portion 16, the
commentary render portion 16 may be provided as a region of the
media render portion 14 and vice versa, and so on, or combinations
thereof. At the time T1, the commentary render portion 16 may be
vacant, may be completely transparent, and so on, or combinations
thereof. At time T2, a section of the media content (e.g.,
intermediate section of the debate) may be encountered to cause the
commentary render portion 16 to populate. In one example, the
commentary render portion 16 may populate by manually and/or
automatically becoming less transparent, by adding commentary, and
so on, or combinations thereof. The commentary displayed in the
commentary render portion 16 may include a plurality of stacked
commentary (e.g., videos, text, images, etc.), which may be
completely overlaid, staggered, side-by-side, and so on, or
combinations thereof. At the time T2, the commentary render portion
16 may display side-by-side textual relevant commentary RC1, RC2,
RC3, RC4, although it is understood that any number and type of
relevant commentary may be displayed (e.g., by scrolling up or down
through the render portion 16, by enlarging the render portion 16,
etc.).
[0031] The relevant commentary RC1, RC2, RC3, RC4 may be provided
based on a preference for a temporal perspective. In one example,
the user may wish to view relevant commentary from a past time
period based on the preference for a past perspective. The user may
view a recorded video of a debate that occurred in a past time
period, a time period may be determined (e.g., a past time period),
and a portion of the relevant commentary (e.g., RC1, etc.) may be
provided by, and/or received at, the commentary render portion 16
from a past time period (e.g., the time period corresponding
approximately to the past original broadcast, the time period
corresponding approximately to before the past original broadcast,
etc.). In another example, the user may wish to view relevant
commentary from a present time period based on the preference for a
present temporal perspective. The user may therefore view the
recorded video of the debate that occurred in the past time period,
a time period may be determined (e.g., a present time period), and
a portion of the relevant commentary (e.g., RC1, etc.) may be
provided by, and/or received at, the commentary render portion 16
from a present time period (e.g., the time period corresponding
approximately to the present replay of the broadcast). In a further
example, the user may wish to view a mixture of relevant commentary
from a past time period based on the preference for a past
perspective and from a present time period based on the preference
for a present perspective.
[0032] The time period employed to impart a temporal perspective to
the relevant commentary may be based on any desired time scale. The
time scale, for example, may include centuries, decades, years,
months, weeks, days, seconds, and so on, or combinations thereof.
The time period may be set according to any parameter. In one
example, the time period may be employed according to a variance,
such an approximate six-month variance from the date of creation of
the media content. Thus, a time period may represent a preference
for a past perspective spanning six months before and/or six months
after the date of the creation of the media content. In another
example, the time period may be employed according to a broadcast
date of the media content. Thus, a time period may represent a
preference for a past perspective for a past broadcast of the media
content (e.g., comments made at the time of a past original
broadcast), a preference for a past perspective before the
broadcast of the media content (e.g., comments made before an
original past and/or present broadcast), a preference for a present
perspective for a present original broadcast of the media content
(e.g., comments made during a present original broadcast), a
preference for a present perspective for a present replay of a past
original broadcast of the media content (e.g., comments made in the
present related to a past original broadcast), and so on, or
combinations thereof.
[0033] In addition, a portion of the relevant commentary RC1, RC2,
RC3, RC4 may be provided based on a topic related to the media
content. The user may view a present original broadcast of the
media content (e.g., live video of a debate between the candidates
18, 20 occurring in real-time), a topic may be determined (e.g.,
topic related to the section of the media content rendered), and a
portion of the relevant commentary (e.g., RC1, etc.) may be
provided by, and/or received at, the commentary render portion 16
in accordance with the topic. The relevant commentary may be from a
past time period, such as comments made at approximately the time
of original broadcast in the past about a topic presented in that
section of the video. The relevant commentary may be from a present
time period, such as comments made at approximately the time of
present replay about the topic.
[0034] The topic may be derived from a user statement, the media
content, and so on, or combinations thereof. In one example, the
user statement may include user commentary entered in response to
commentary, to the section of the media content, and so on, or
combinations thereof. For example, a section of the media content
may be encountered (e.g., a discussion by the candidates 18, 20) to
cause the user to enter user commentary (e.g., via voice, text, an
opinion such as "thumbs up", favorite, bookmarking, etc.)
representative of the topic. In another example, the topic may be
derived from a statement made by a narrator of the media content,
from an object in the media content (e.g., a statement made by the
candidates 18, 20, etc.), from an author of the media content, from
other information associated with the media content (e.g.,
metadata, section headings, titles, a quote, etc.), and so on, or
combinations thereof.
[0035] In addition, the relevant commentary RC1, RC2, RC3, RC4 may
be provided based on a preference for a viewpoint. For example, the
user may view a present original broadcast of the media content
(e.g., live video of a debate between the candidates 18, 20
occurring in real-time), a viewpoint may be determined (e.g., a
viewpoint associated with a topic and/or a section of the media
content), and a portion of the relevant commentary (e.g., RC1,
etc.) may be provided by, and/or received at, the commentary render
portion 16 in accordance with the viewpoint. The relevant
commentary may be from a past time period, such as comments made at
approximately the time of original broadcast in the past regarding
a viewpoint presented in that section of the media content. The
relevant commentary may be from a present time period, such as
comments made at approximately the time of video replay regarding
the viewpoint. The viewpoint may be derived from a user statement,
user history information, and/or the media content. In one example,
the user statement may include user commentary entered in response
a section of the media content. For example, a section of the media
content may be encountered (e.g., a topic raised by the candidates
18, 20) to cause the user to enter user commentary (e.g., via
voice, text, a vote such as a "thumbs up", a favorite designation,
bookmarking, etc.) representative of the viewpoint.
[0036] In another example, a section of the media content may be
encountered to cause the viewpoint to be derived from the user
history. The user history may include website search information,
favorite information, bookmark information, metadata, opinion
information (e.g., "thumbs up", rankings, etc.), social network
membership information, comments made by the user in the past
(e.g., posts, etc.), and so on, or combinations thereof. In a
further example, a section of the media content may be encountered
to cause the viewpoint to be derived from the media content. For
example, the viewpoint may be derived from a statement made by a
narrator of the media content, from an object in the media content
(e.g., a statement made by the candidates 18, 20, etc.), from an
author of the media content, from other information associated with
the media content (e.g., metadata, section headings, titles, a
quote, etc.), and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0037] The relevant commentary RC1, RC2, RC3, RC4 may also be
provided based on one or more of a viewpoint agreement, a viewpoint
disagreement, and/or viewpoint neutrality. The user may view a
present original broadcast of the media content (e.g., live video
of a debate between the candidates 18, 20 occurring in real-time),
a viewpoint may be determined (e.g., one of the candidates 18, 20
talks about a specific topic of a certain point of view), and a
portion of the relevant commentary (e.g., RC1, etc.) may be
provided by, and/or received at, the commentary render portion 16
in accordance with the viewpoint correspondence. The relevant
commentary provided may be based on a degree of correspondence with
a viewpoint. In one example, the user may have a "pro" viewpoint
for the topic, which may agree with the viewpoint of the speaker,
and the relevant commentary may be provided corresponding to an
agreement viewpoint of the user and the speaker (e.g., comments
that agree with the viewpoint). In another example, the user may
have a "pro" viewpoint for the topic, which disagrees with the
viewpoint of the speaker, and the relevant commentary may be
provided corresponding to a disagreement viewpoint (e.g., comments
that disagree with the viewpoint of the user, comments that
disagree with the viewpoint of the speaker, etc.). In a further
example, the commentary may be based on a neutral position for the
viewpoint, which may provide all comments related to the topic, no
comments related to the topic, and so on, or combinations
thereof.
[0038] The relevant commentary RC1, RC2, RC3, RC4 may also be
provided based on one or more other viewpoint factors. For example,
the commentary may be based on one or more of a geographic
location, age, gender, height, weight, education, and/or career. In
one example, the relevant commentary (e.g., RC1, etc.) which may be
provided when the user is viewing the debate between the candidates
18, 20 may vary according to a geographic viewpoint (e.g., a Texas
viewpoint, a New York viewpoint, etc.), according to an age
viewpoint (e.g., relatively younger voters, relatively older
voters, etc.), and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0039] In addition, the relevant commentary RC1, RC2, RC3, RC4 may
be provided based on a preference for a state of a social network.
The user may view a present original broadcast of the media content
(e.g., live video of a debate between the candidates 18, 20
occurring in real-time), a state of a social network may be
determined (e.g., membership of a social network, content
accessible via the social network), and a portion of the relevant
commentary (e.g., RC1, etc.) may be provided by, and/or received
at, the commentary render portion 16 in accordance with the state
of the social network. The relevant commentary may be from a past
social network, such as by the members of the social network at
approximately the time of original broadcast in the past, content
accessible to the user via the social network at approximately the
time of original broadcast in the past, and so on, or combinations
thereof. The relevant commentary may be from a present social
network, such as by the members of the social network at
approximately the time of video replay, content accessible to the
user via the social network at approximately the time of video
replay, and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0040] Generally, a social network may include an online social
network, such as intranet social network and/or internet social
network, where users may interact and/or establish relationships
with each other. For the purpose of illustration, a social intranet
network may include a social community of employees able to
communicate over an internal employer computer network. Internet
social networks may include, for example, FACEBOOK.RTM.,
TWITTER.RTM., LINKEDIN.RTM. (registered trademarks of Facebook,
Twitter, and Linkedin, respectively) web sites. In addition,
internet social networks may include question-and-answer (Q&A)
web sites, such as QUORA.RTM., YAHOO!.RTM. ANSWERS, and STACK
OVERFLOW.RTM. (registered trademarks of Quora, Yahoo, and Stack
Overflow, respectively). Thus, a social network may include two or
more people (e.g., a group) that communicate based on one or more
criteria, such as shared interests, particular subjects, and so on,
or combinations thereof. For the purpose of illustration, a social
network may include two or more users that "like" a particular
FACEBOOK.RTM. web page. In addition, any social network may include
two or more people that express a relationship with each other,
such as a professional, personal, familial, geographic, and/or
educational relationship. Users of a social network may establish
relationships with each other, such as by joining a group, becoming
"friends", and/or establishing a "connection" to form a candidate
social community. A social network may be pre-existing.
[0041] The relevant commentary may be scoped to the state of a
social network to provide (and/or receive) relevant commentary that
would be made, that was actually made, and so on, or combinations
thereof. The relevant commentary may be scoped to a present state
of the social network, which may include a state at approximately
the time of a present replay of the media content, a state at
approximately the time of a present original broadcast, and so on,
or combinations thereof. The scope to the present state may include
present commentary (e.g., present comments) and/or past commentary
(e.g., past comments) representative of how members of that present
social network would (and/or did) comment in response to the media
content (and/or similar media content). In another example, the
relevant commentary may be scoped to a past state of the social
network, which may include a state at approximately the time before
an original broadcast, a state at approximately the time of a past
original broadcast, and so on, or combinations thereof. The scope
to the past state may include present commentary (e.g., present
comments) and/or past commentary (e.g., past comments)
representative of how members of that past social network would
(and/or did) comment in response to the media content (and/or
similar media content). Thus, the members of a past social network
and/or a present social network may appear to respond using a past
sentiment and/or present sentiment.
[0042] In a further example, scoping the relevant commentary to the
past social network state may cause the user to receive relevant
commentary from users (e.g., members) in the social network (e.g.,
at a specific time in the past) and/or content that the user may
have had access to via the social network (e.g., at the specific
time in the past). In a yet another example, scoping the relevant
commentary to the present social network state may cause the user
to receive relevant commentary from users (e.g., members) in the
social network (e.g., at a specific time in the present) and/or
content that the user may have access to via the social network
(e.g., at the specific time in the present). Thus, the state of one
or more social networks may be utilized to determine which content
is to be, and/or is not to be, provided to the user. In yet another
example, specifying a state of a social network in the past (e.g.,
a state in the year 2012) may cause the content utilized (e.g., as
potential relevant commentary) to include posts and/or content that
the user may have had access to in the past (e.g., in the year
2012) via the social network in the past.
[0043] In addition, the relevant commentary RC1, RC2, RC3, RC4 may
be provided based on an authorship independent of a media content
access event by an author of the relevant commentary. The user may
watch a present original broadcast of the media content (e.g., live
video of a debate between the candidates 18, 20 occurring in
real-time), it may be determined if an authorship independent of a
media content access event occurred (e.g., commentary related to a
topic of a section of the media content without viewing the media
content), and a portion of the relevant commentary (e.g., RC1,
etc.) may be provided by, and/or received at, the commentary render
portion 16. The relevant commentary may be from a past time period,
such as comments made at approximately the time of original
broadcast in the past by authors that did not view the broadcast,
comments made before the original broadcast, and so on, or
combinations thereof. The relevant commentary may be from a present
time period, such as comments made at approximately the time of
video replay by authors that did not view the original broadcast,
the replay, and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0044] Thus, while the relevant commentary may include commentary
that was generated (e.g., authored) for the media content while the
author viewed the media content, the relevant commentary may not
necessarily be temporally and/or spatially linked to the media
content. In one example, the relevant commentary does not come from
the media content, was not generated specifically for the media
content, was not generated while viewing the media content, and so
on, or combinations thereof. In another example, the relevant
commentary may be based on an authorship of the commentary that is
related to a viewpoint, a topic, an object, and so on, or
combinations thereof.
[0045] In the illustrated example of FIG. 1B, the scheme 8 includes
components having similar reference numerals as those already
discussed in the scheme 6 of FIG. 1A, and are to be understood to
incorporate similar functionality. In this variation, the user may
enter user commentary UC1 in the commentary render portion 16, at
the time T1. The user commentary UC1 may be entered by making the
commentary public, by typing in the commentary, by adding the
commentary (e.g., copy and past a link, etc.), by making the
commentary opaque, and so on, or combinations thereof. In one
example, the user commentary UC1 may be entered in response to
encountering a section of the media content (e.g., intermediate
section of the video of the debate). In another example, the user
commentary UC1 may be entered in response to encountering a topic
and/or a viewpoint, for example a topic and/or a viewpoint
presented by one or more of the candidates 18, 20. The user
commentary may also be used to derive the viewpoint and/or or the
topic. The user commentary UC1 may be from a present time period,
such as a time period approximately at the time of replay of the
media content. In addition, a portion of the relevant commentary
RC1, RC2, RC3, RC4 may be based on the user commentary UC1, such as
a post returned based on a topic and/or viewpoint represented by
the user commentary UC1.
[0046] In the illustrated example, the user experience may be
enhanced by simulating an interactive commentary session. In one
example, the user commentary UC1 may be shared with a social
network at the time T2, such as one or more present social networks
affiliated with the user, to populate respective commentary render
portions corresponding to one or more other affiliated members. In
another example, the user commentary UC1 may be encountered to
cause the commentary render portion 16 to populate with the
relevant commentary RC1 at the time T2. The relevant commentary may
be based on the user commentary UC1, as well as one or more of a
preference for a temporal perspective, a viewpoint, a state of a
social network, a topic, an authorship, and so on, or combinations
thereof. The user may enter further user commentary UC2 and receive
further relevant commentary RC2. Thus, an interactive commentary
session may be simulated at the time T2.
[0047] Although the relevant commentary RC1, RC2 may be from a past
time period, the commentary session may be perceived by the user as
occurring in the present, in real-time, via the simulation. The
user may view a recorded video of a debate which occurred in a past
time period, may enter user commentary (e.g., UC1) that disagrees
with one of the candidates 18, 20 (e.g., disagrees with a
viewpoint) at the time T1, and receive relevant commentary (e.g.,
RC1, etc.) at the time T2 that an individual also disagreeing would
have (and/or did) receive at time of original past broadcast of
debate via the simulation. In addition, the relevant commentary
(e.g., RC1, etc.) may include commentary from members of a past
social network state and/or a present social network to provide
past sentiments and/or present sentiments associated with the media
content via the simulation. For example, members of a past social
network may appear to respond via the simulation with relevant
commentary representative of their present viewpoints, of their
past viewpoints, etc., while members of a present social network
may appear to respond via the simulation with relevant commentary
representative of their present viewpoints, of their past
viewpoints, etc., and so on, or combinations thereof. In the
illustrated example of FIG. 1C, the scheme 10 includes components
having similar reference numerals as those already discussed in the
scheme 6 of FIG. 1A and/or scheme 8 of FIG. 1B, and are to be
understood to incorporate similar functionality. In this variation,
the user may view initial commentary IC1 in the commentary render
portion 16, at the time T1. The initial commentary IC1 may be
displayed by making the commentary public, by adding the
commentary, by making the commentary opaque, and so on, or
combinations thereof. In one example, the initial commentary IC1
may be displayed in response to encountering a section of the media
content. In another example, the initial commentary IC1 may be
displayed in response to encountering a topic and/or a viewpoint.
The initial commentary IC1 may also be used to derive the viewpoint
and/or or the topic. The initial commentary IC1 may be from a
present time period, a past time period, and so on, or combinations
thereof.
[0048] The initial commentary IC1 may be used to determine a user
interest. The user interest may involve an interest for a viewpoint
and/or topic represented by the initial commentary IC1. In the
illustrated example, the user commentary UC1 may be entered in
response to the initial commentary IC1 at the time T1, which may
lead to an interaction (e.g., FIG. 1A, FIG. 1B, etc.), described
above, at the time T2. For example, at least a portion of the
relevant commentary may be provided based on the user commentary.
The initial commentary IC1 may also be used to clarify an ambiguous
section of the media content. The initial commentary IC1 may
include one or more questions made at a render of the ambiguous
section, a comment made (e.g., a comment about the subject matter
of the content) at the render of the ambiguous section, a comment
made (e.g., an answer) in response to a comment made (e.g., a
question) at a render of the ambiguous section, and so on, or
combinations thereof.
[0049] In the illustrated example, the user may view clarifying
commentary CC1 in the commentary render portion 16, at the time T1.
The clarifying commentary CC1 may be displayed by making the
commentary public, by adding the commentary, by making the
commentary opaque, and so on, or combinations thereof. In one
example, the clarifying commentary CC1 may be displayed in response
to encountering a section of the media content that is ambiguous,
determined from questions made, from initial commentary IC1, from
user commentary UC1, from mappings, from metadata, and so on, or
combinations thereof. The clarifying commentary CC1 may be
displayed in response to encountering a topic and/or a viewpoint,
and/or may be used to derive the viewpoint and/or or the topic. The
clarifying commentary CC1 may be a further refinement of the
initial commentary IC1, or may be the initial commentary IC1
itself. The clarifying commentary CC1 may include a comment
describing the media content, a link to further comments describing
the media content, responses to questions made in the past related
to the media content, and so on, or combinations thereof.
Accordingly, the user commentary UC2 may be entered in response to
the clarifying commentary CC1 at the time T1 (e.g., comment "that
makes sense", a link having a relative high degree of relatedness
to a possible topic, etc.), which may lead to an interaction (e.g.,
FIG. 1A, FIG. 1B, etc.), as described above, and/or the interaction
of FIG. 1C at the time T2.
[0050] FIG. 2 shows an architecture 102 that may be used to provide
(and/or receive) relevant commentary in response to rendering a
section of media content according to an embodiment. In the
illustrated example, media logic 122 may detect a media content
access event. In one example, the media logic 122 may detect the
generation, processing, storing, retrieving, rendering, and/or
exchanging of information in electronic form. The media logic 122
may also identify a section of the media content, such as a frame
of the media content, an intermediate section of the media content,
and so on, or combinations thereof. In the illustrated example,
user logic 128 may enter user commentary, which may be from a
present time period, a past time period, and so on, or combinations
thereof. In one example, the user commentary may be related to the
media content, the section of the media content, a viewpoint, a
topic, and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0051] The user logic 128 may provide a user interface (e.g., a
graphical user interface, a command line interface, etc.) to access
one or more configurable settings. In one example, the user logic
128 may provide access to one or more settings associated with
providing and/or receiving relevant commentary. The settings may
include options to determine the media access event, to identify a
section of the media content, to specify the number and the type of
relevant commentary, to specify the manner of displaying the media
content and/or commentary, to specify the manner of entering user
commentary, initial commentary, and/or clarifying commentary, to
derive a viewpoint and/or a topic, to specify a preference for a
temporal perspective, for a viewpoint, for a state of social
network, to specify an authorship independent of a media content
access event by an author of the relevant commentary, to clarify an
ambiguous section of the media content, and/or to simulate an
interactive commentary session. The settings may include an
automatic feature, for example to automatically determine the
configurations based on history information, machine learning
processes, and so on, or combinations thereof. In one example, the
time period may be set by the user via the user interface, which
may allow the user to input the time period, select the time
period, enable (and/or disable) an automatic implementation of a
manually and/or automatically derived time period, and so on, or
combinations thereof.
[0052] In the illustrated example, relevant commentary logic 134
may filter the commentary. The relevant commentary logic 134 may
filter the commentary based on a preference for a temporal
perspective, such as a past perspective, a present perspective, and
so on, or combinations thereof. The relevant commentary logic 134
may determine and/or employ a time period to impart a temporal
perspective to the relevant commentary, which may be on any desired
time scale. The time period may be employed based on any parameter,
such as a variance, a broadcast date, and so on, or combinations
thereof. In addition, the relevant commentary logic 134 may filter
the commentary based on a preference for a viewpoint, which may be
derived from a user statement, user history information, the media
content, and so on, or combinations thereof. In one example, the
relevant commentary logic 134 may filter the commentary based a
viewpoint agreement, a viewpoint disagreement, and/or a viewpoint
neutrality. In another example, the relevant commentary logic 134
may filter the commentary based on one or more further viewpoint
factors, such as a geographic location, age, gender, and so on, or
combinations thereof.
[0053] The relevant commentary logic 134 may also filter the
commentary based on a preference for a state of a social network,
such as a past state of a social network, a present state of a
social network, and so on, or combinations thereof. The relevant
commentary logic 134 may determine the state of the social network,
and/or filter the commentary based on the state, to provide present
commentary and/or past commentary representative of how members of
the past social network and/or the present social network would
(and/or did) comment in response to the media content (and/or
similar media content), to provide content accessible via the
social network according to the state, and so on, or combinations
thereof. In addition, the relevant commentary logic 134 may
determine a topic related to the media content. The relevant
commentary logic 134 may derive the topic from a user statement,
the media content, and so on, or combinations thereof. In one
example, the topic may be related to a section of the media content
(e.g., a chapter, etc.). The relevant commentary logic 134 may also
derive the topic from a comment expressed by one or more of the
user and/or the media content.
[0054] The relevant commentary logic 134 may determine an
authorship of the media content. An author of the media content may
include a performer of the media content (e.g., writer, singer,
etc.), an organization that is the source of the media content
(e.g., publisher, source web site, etc.), and so on, or
combinations thereof. In one example, the relevant commentary logic
134 may determine if an authorship of the relevant commentary is
independent of a media content access event by the author of the
relevant commentary. The relevant commentary logic 134 may provide
commentary that was made for the media content, that does not come
from the media content, was not generated specifically for the
media content, was not generated while viewing the media content,
and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0055] The relevant commentary logic 134 may also enter initial
commentary, for example in response to encountering a section of
the media content, in response to encountering a topic and/or a
viewpoint, and so on, or combinations thereof. The relevant
commentary logic 134 may enter initial commentary that may be from
a present time period (e.g., as real-time initial commentary), from
a past time period (e.g., as stored initial commentary), and so on,
or combinations thereof. In one example, the initial commentary may
be related to the media content, the section of the media content,
a viewpoint, a topic, and so on, or combinations thereof. The
relevant commentary logic 134 may enter the initial commentary to
determine a user interest, to clarify an ambiguous section of the
media content, to derive a topic and/or a viewpoint, and so on, or
combinations thereof.
[0056] The relevant commentary logic 134 may clarify an ambiguous
section of the media content. The relevant commentary logic 134 may
clarify the section by, for example, determining and/or employing
information such as a mapping associated with the ambiguous
section, metadata associated with the media content, and so on, or
combinations thereof. The relevant commentary logic 134 may enter
clarifying commentary in response to, for example, encountering a
section of the media content that is ambiguous, encountering a
topic and/or a viewpoint, and so on, or combinations thereof. The
relevant commentary logic 134 may enter clarifying commentary that
may be from a present time period (e.g., as real-time initial
commentary), from a past time period (e.g., as stored initial
commentary), and so on, or combinations thereof. In one example,
the relevant commentary may be related to the media content, the
section of the media content, a viewpoint, a topic, and so on, or
combinations thereof. In another example, the clarifying commentary
may be a further refinement of the initial commentary, may be the
initial commentary itself, and so on, or combinations thereof. The
relevant commentary logic 134 may enter clarifying commentary to
derive a viewpoint and/or or a topic. In addition, the relevant
commentary logic 134 may also simulate an interactive commentary
session. The interactive commentary session may provide a user
experience where the commentary session may be perceived by the
user as occurring in the present (in real-time), even though the
relevant commentary may be from a past time period, a present time
period, and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0057] Accordingly, the relevant commentary logic 134 may provide
relevant comment data 152 having relevant commentary based on one
or more of the logic associated therewith. In one example, a user
may view a broadcast of a debate that occurred in the past, and the
user may receive a stream of posts that were made in real-time
during the debate in the past. In addition, the user may make a
post (e.g., user commentary) related to the content of the
broadcast (e.g., a topic) and/or related to the stream of posts
(e.g., negative posts, positive posts, general questions, etc.).
The user may, in response, receive posts and/or other content
(e.g., news articles, blog posts, video responses, etc.) from the
past that were responses to similar posts as the user post. The
user may also specify a setting to filter the commentary to view
comments that coincide (e.g., agree, disagree, are natural) with
the broadcast, the stream of posts, and/or the user post. The user
may scope the commentary to past viewpoints of members of a past
social network, present viewpoints of members of a present social
network, present viewpoints of members of a past social network,
and so on, or combinations thereof. Thus, if the user agrees with a
candidate's position for a topic presented in the debate and has a
preference for an experience of opposition at the time of the
original broadcast of the debate in the past, the user will be
provided a stream of posts (e.g., poll disapproval ratings, twitter
posts, etc.) reflecting the opposition during the time of the
debate in the past.
[0058] In another example, a user may view a broadcast of a debate
that occurred in the past, and the user may receive a stream of
posts that are presently being made in real-time at the time of the
replay of the debate in the present. The stream of posts may be
related to a viewpoint and/or a topic. The user may make a post
(i.e., to the architecture 102 and/or the broader social network)
related to the content of the broadcast (e.g., a topic), the stream
of posts (e.g., negative posts, positive posts, general questions,
etc.), and so on, or combinations thereof. The user may, in
response, receive posts and/or other content (e.g., news articles,
blog posts, video responses, etc.) from the present that are
related to the content and/or the user post. The user may also
specify a setting to filter the commentary to view comments that
coincide (e.g., agree, disagree, are neutral) with the broadcast,
the stream of posts, and/or the user post. The user may scope the
commentary to past viewpoints of members of a past social network,
present viewpoints of members of a present social network, present
viewpoints of members of a past social network, and so on, or
combinations thereof. Thus, if the user agrees with a candidate's
position for a topic presented in the debate and has a preference
for an experience of support at the time of replay of the debate in
the present, the user will be provided a stream of posts (e.g.,
poll approval ratings, twitter posts, etc.) reflecting the support
that are presently being made at the time of replay of the debate
in the present.
[0059] In a further example, a user may view a broadcast of a
debate that occurred in the past, and a portion of the content may
be analyzed for an ambiguous section of the broadcast based on, for
example, questions that were made during the broadcast, after the
broadcast, and so on, or combinations thereof. Thus, when an
identified ambiguous section of the broadcast is replayed, the user
may view posts made for clarification to provide a greater level of
understanding to the user (e.g., an understanding of the media
content, of a topic, of a viewpoint, etc.). The architecture 102
may determine the context of the section of the broadcast by
analyzing metadata associated with the content, a posting generated
approximately at the time of each section of the broadcast, and so
on, or combinations thereof. The architecture 102 may also leverage
sources for mappings between the media content sections and
relevant posts (and/or media content). Mapping information may
include tags, time stamp relationships, and prior interaction
history with the source (and/or source author) of the media content
being viewed, of similar content, and so on, or combinations
thereof.
[0060] In yet another example, the user may receive commentary made
(e.g., presently made, made in the past, etc.) associated with one
or more topics presented in the media content (e.g., debate)
without requiring the author of the commentary to view the media
content. The commentary may be obtained from, for example, a
present article from a news organization associated with one or
more topics presented in the media content, a post made in response
to reading the present news article, and so on, or combinations
thereof. In yet a further example, the architecture 102 may
determine a viewpoint of the user, the media content, and so on, or
combinations thereof. Thus, the architecture 102 may filter the
commentary based on a temporal preference, a viewpoint, and/or a
state of the social network to provide data from the past, the
present, or a combination thereof. The user may have the
opportunity to post an opinion, and view commentary from any
desired time period, from any desired viewpoint, and/or from any
desired social network. In addition, the user may experience an
interactive commentary session which may appear as a live
commentary interaction session, although the commentary is not
being generated (e.g., authored) in real-time.
[0061] Turning now to FIG. 3, an architecture 202 is shown that may
be used to provide (and/or receive) relevant commentary in response
to rendering a section of media content according to an embodiment.
Logic components identified in the architecture 202 of FIG. 3
having similar reference numerals as those already discussed in the
architecture 102 of FIG. 2 are to be understood to incorporate
similar functionality. In this variation, media logic 222 may
include media access detection logic 224 to detect a media content
access event. The media access detection logic 224 may detect the
generation, processing, storing, retrieving, rendering, and/or
exchanging of information in electronic form. In one example, the
media access detection logic 224 may detect launching of a media
player application, launching of a web browser, retrieving of the
media content from storage, receiving the media content from an
image capture device (e.g., on or off-device camera), rendering
(e.g., displaying) the media content, and so on, or combinations
thereof. In addition, the media logic 222 may include section
identification logic 226 to identify a section of the media
content. The section identification logic 226 may identify a frame
of a video, an area of an image, a segment of audio, a domain of a
hypertext link, a chapter of a book, a paragraph of an article, and
so on, or combinations thereof. The section identification logic
226 may also identify a beginning section of the media content, an
intermediate section of the media content, a final section of the
media content, and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0062] In the illustrated example, user logic 228 may include user
commentary logic 230 to enter user commentary. The user commentary
logic 230 may enter user commentary by making the commentary
public, by typing in the commentary, by adding the commentary
(e.g., copy and past a link, etc.), by making the commentary
opaque, and so on, or combinations thereof. The user commentary may
be from a present time period, for example as real-time user
commentary. The user commentary may be from a past time period, for
example as stored user commentary. The user commentary may be
related to the media content, the section of the media content, a
viewpoint, a topic, and so on, or combinations thereof. The user
logic 228 may also include user preference logic 232. The user
preference logic 232 may provide access to one or more settings
associated with providing and/or receiving relevant commentary.
[0063] In the illustrated example, relevant commentary logic 234
may include temporal logic 234 to filter the commentary based on a
preference for a temporal perspective. The temporal logic 234 may
filter the commentary based on a preference for a past perspective,
a preference for a present perspective, and so on, or combinations
thereof. The temporal logic 234 may determine and/or employ a time
period to impart a temporal perspective to the relevant commentary,
which may be on any desired time scale. The time period may be
employed based on any parameter, such as a variance, a broadcast
date, and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0064] In the illustrated example, the relevant commentary logic
234 may include viewpoint logic 238 to filter the commentary based
on a preference for a viewpoint. In one example, the viewpoint
logic 238 may derive the viewpoint from one or more of a user
statement, user history information, the media content (e.g., a
section of the media content), and so on, or combinations thereof.
In another example, the viewpoint logic 238 may filter the
commentary based on one or more of a viewpoint agreement, a
viewpoint disagreement, a viewpoint neutrality, and so on, or
combinations thereof. In a further example, the viewpoint logic 238
may derive the commentary based on one or more further viewpoint
factors, such as a geographic location, age, gender, and so on, or
combinations thereof.
[0065] In the illustrated example, the relevant commentary logic
234 may include social network logic 240 to filter the commentary
based on a preference for a state of a social network. The social
network logic 240 may filter the commentary based on a preference
for a past state of a social network, a present state of a social
network, and so on, or combinations thereof. The social network
logic 240 may determine the state of the social network, and/or
filter the commentary based on the state, to provide present
commentary and/or past commentary representative of how members of
the past social network and/or the present social network would
(and/or did) comment in response to the media content (and/or
similar media content), to provide content accessible via the
social network according to the state, and so on, or combinations
thereof.
[0066] In the illustrated example, the relevant commentary logic
234 may include topic logic 242 to determine a topic related to the
media content. The topic logic 242 may derive the topic from a user
statement, the media content, and so on, or combinations thereof.
In one example, the topic may be related to a section of the media
content (e.g., portion thereof, a chapter, etc.). The topic logic
242 may derive the topic from a comment expressed by one or more of
the user, the media content, and so on, or combinations
thereof.
[0067] In the illustrated example, the relevant commentary logic
234 may include authorship logic 244 to determine an authorship of
the media content. The authorship logic 244 may determine if an
authorship of the commentary is independent of a media content
access event by the author of the relevant commentary. In one
example, the authorship logic 244 may filter the commentary to
provide commentary that was made for the media content, that does
not come from the media content, was not generated specifically for
the media content, was not generated while viewing the media
content, and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0068] In the illustrated example, the relevant commentary logic
234 may include initial commentary logic 246 to provide initial
commentary. The initial commentary logic 246 may enter the initial
commentary by making the commentary public, by typing in the
commentary, by adding the commentary (e.g., copy and past a link,
etc.), by making the commentary opaque, and so on, or combinations
thereof. The initial commentary may be from a present time period,
for example as real-time initial commentary. The initial commentary
may be from a past time period, for example as stored initial
commentary. The initial commentary may be related to the media
content, the section of the media content, a viewpoint, a topic,
and so on, or combinations thereof. The initial commentary logic
246 may enter the initial commentary to determine a user interest,
to clarify an ambiguous section of the media content, to derive a
topic and/or a viewpoint, and so on, or combinations thereof.
[0069] In the illustrated example, the relevant commentary logic
234 may include clarification logic 248 to clarify an ambiguous
section of the media content. The clarification logic 248 may
determine and/or employ information to clarify the ambiguous
section, such as a mapping associated with the ambiguous section,
metadata associated with the media content, and so on, or
combinations thereof. The clarification logic 248 may enter
clarifying commentary by making the commentary public, by adding
the commentary, my making the commentary opaque, and so on, or
combinations thereof. The clarification logic 248 may enter
clarifying commentary in response to, for example, encountering a
section of the media content that is ambiguous, encountering a
topic and/or a viewpoint, and so on, or combinations thereof. The
clarification logic 248 may enter clarifying commentary that may be
from a present time period (e.g., as real-time initial commentary),
from a past time period (e.g., as stored initial commentary), and
so on, or combinations thereof. The relevant commentary may be
related to the media content, the section of the media content, a
viewpoint, a topic, and so on, or combinations thereof. The
clarifying commentary may be a further refinement of the initial
commentary, may be the initial commentary itself, and so on, or
combinations thereof. The clarification logic 248 may enter
clarifying commentary to derive a viewpoint and/or or a topic.
[0070] In the illustrated example, the relevant commentary logic
234 may include simulation logic 250 to simulate an interactive
commentary session. The simulation logic 250 may provide a user
experience where the commentary session may appear as occurring in
the present, in real-time, even though the relevant commentary may
be from a past time period, a present time period, and so on, or
combinations thereof. Accordingly, the relevant commentary logic
234 may provide relevant comment data 252 having relevant
commentary based on one or more of the logic associated
therewith.
[0071] FIG. 4 shows a method 302 of providing and/or receiving
relevant commentary in response to rendering a section of media
content according to an embodiment. Illustrated processing block
354 provides for detecting a media content access event, for
example by a user, by a computing platform, and so on, or
combinations thereof. Thus, the media content access event may
correspond to, for example, the media content access event (e.g.,
FIG. 1 to FIG. 3) already discussed. Relevant commentary may be
provided and/or received in response to rendering the media
content, such as a section of the media content, at block 356. The
relevant commentary may correspond to, for example, the relevant
commentary (e.g., FIG. 1 to FIG. 3) already discussed. At least a
portion of the relevant commentary may be provided and/or received
based on a preference for a temporal perspective at block 358,
wherein the temporal perspective in block 358 may correspond to,
for example, the temporal perspective (e.g., FIG. 1 to FIG. 3)
already discussed. At least a portion of the relevant commentary
may be provided and/or received based on a preference for a
viewpoint at block 360, wherein the viewpoint in block 360 may
correspond to, for example, the viewpoint (e.g., FIG. 1 to FIG. 3)
already discussed. At least a portion of the relevant commentary
may be provided and/or received based on a preference for a state
of a social network at block 362, wherein the state of the social
network in block 362 may correspond to, for example, the state
(e.g., FIG. 1 to FIG. 3) already discussed.
[0072] The method 302 may also provide and/or receive at least a
portion of the relevant commentary based on a topic at block 364,
for example a topic related to the section of the media content
that is rendered. Thus, the relevant commentary in block 364 may
correspond to, for example, the relevant commentary based on a
topic (e.g., FIG. 1 to FIG. 3) already discussed. In addition, the
method 302 may provide and/or receive at least a portion of the
relevant commentary based on an authorship independent of a media
content access event by an author of the relevant commentary at
block 366. Thus, the relevant commentary in block 366 may
correspond to, for example, the relevant commentary based on an
authorship (e.g., FIG. 1 to FIG. 3) already discussed.
Additionally, the method 302 may clarify an ambiguous section of
the media content at block 368. Thus, for example, an ambiguous
section of the media content at block 368 may be clarified (e.g.,
FIG. 1 to FIG. 3) as already discussed. The method 302 may also
simulate an interactive commentary session at block 370. Thus, for
example, an interactive commentary session at block 370 may be
simulated (e.g., FIG. 1 to FIG. 3) as already discussed.
[0073] While not shown, it is understood that any functionality
presented herein may be employed in the operation of the method
302. For example, the method 302 may provide and/or receive initial
commentary to the user related to the section, provide and/or
receive user commentary in response to the initial commentary,
provide and/or receive at least a portion of the relevant
commentary based the user commentary, and so on, or combinations
thereof. In addition, the method 302 may provide and/or receive
media content and initial commentary from a past time period, user
commentary from a present time period, and/or a portion of the
relevant commentary from the past time period. The method 302 may
also provide and/or receive media content from a past time period,
initial commentary and user commentary from a present time period,
and a portion of the relevant commentary from the present time
period. As a final non-limiting example, the method 302 may provide
and/or receive a portion of the relevant commentary from a present
time period and a past time period.
[0074] FIG. 5 shows a computing device 486 having a processor 488,
mass storage 490 (e.g., read only memory/ROM, optical disk, flash
memory), a network interface 492, and system memory 494 (e.g.,
random access memory/RAM). In the illustrated example, the
processor 488 is configured to execute logic 496, wherein the logic
496 may implement one or more aspects of the schemes 8 to 10 (FIG.
1A to FIG. 1C), the architecture 102 (FIG. 2), the architecture 202
(FIG. 3), and/or the method 302 (FIG. 4), already discussed. Thus,
the logic 496 may enable the computing device 486 to function to
provide (and/or receive) relevant commentary, for example in
response to rendering a section of media content. The logic 496 may
also be implemented as a software application that is distributed
among many computers (e.g., local or remote). Thus, while a single
computer could provide the functionality described herein, systems
implementing these features can use many interconnected computers
(e.g., for scalability as well as modular implementation).
[0075] The flowchart and block diagrams in the Figures illustrate
the architecture, functionality, and operation of possible
implementations of systems, methods and computer program products
according to various embodiments of the present invention. In this
regard, each block in the flowchart or block diagrams may represent
a module, segment, or portion of code, which comprises one or more
executable instructions for implementing the specified logical
function(s). It should also be noted that, in some alternative
implementations, the functions noted in the block may occur out of
the order noted in the figures. For example, two blocks shown in
succession may, in fact, be executed substantially concurrently, or
the blocks may sometimes be executed in the reverse order,
depending upon the functionality involved. It will also be noted
that each block of the block diagrams and/or flowchart
illustration, and combinations of blocks in the block diagrams
and/or flowchart illustration, can be implemented by special
purpose hardware-based systems that perform the specified functions
or acts, or combinations of special purpose hardware and computer
instructions. In addition, the terms "first", "second", etc. may be
used herein only to facilitate discussion, and carry no particular
temporal or chronological significance unless otherwise
indicated.
[0076] Those skilled in the art will appreciate from the foregoing
description that the broad techniques of the embodiments of the
present invention can be implemented in a variety of forms.
Therefore, while the embodiments of this invention have been
described in connection with particular examples thereof, the true
scope of the embodiments of the invention should not be so limited
since other modifications will become apparent to the skilled
practitioner upon a study of the drawings, specification, and
following claims.
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