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  • #1Joy Huang said ...(on 04-19-2007)

    Joy Huang
    I love diigo over all other similar services, but I do wish there was one added feature. I like del.icio.us' suggested tag feature, because no matter how much I wrack my brain for different tags, there's always a better one that someone has thought of. It'd be great to see what others have tagged on a certain webpage, sort of like a global consensus type thing on organizing bookmarks. Are there any features like this in the works?

    Keep of the great work!
  • #2Maggie Tsai said ...(on 04-21-2007, replying to Joy Huang on #1)

    Maggie Tsai
    We'd like to add the suggested tags.

    In other services - they are strictly website-based, so it's easier to implement that point and select feature. However, we need to give more thought on both the UI interface & technical implementation on our pop-up bookmarking window. We haven't had much time to give it more thought yet...

    Suggestions welcome.


  • #3Ole C Brudvik said ...(on 04-22-2007, replying to Maggie Tsai on #2)

    Ole C  Brudvik
    Working with ontologies and folksonomies:

    There are several people working in this area: Patrick Schmitz has presented research into a
    model that works with both folksonomies and ontologies by leveraging statistical natural
    language processing. His goal is to develop a system that retains the flexibility of free tagging
    for annotation but make uses of ontology in the search and browse interface (Schmitz, 2006).
    Another proposal, from Dave Beckett (2006), is to make more use of the social context within which tags are created by separating the tool that creates the tags from the tool with which
    they are used. He also proposes that wiki pages should be created for individual tags which
    users could then add to/edit so that the wiki page, in effect, becomes the tag. The on-going
    process of refinement for each separate tag would form a kind of consensus as to the meaning
    of that tag and would also record the processes (the semantic path) by which the end result is
    being reached. This would, to take just one simple example, allow direct links to other
    language versions of the same tag.

    In terms of bookmarking services such as Del.icio.us and the open source SiteBar
    (www.sitebar.org), one of the key problems is how best to classify the growing list of URLs.
    At the WWW2006 conference in Edinburgh, Dominic Benz et al, from the University of
    Freiburg, put forward an idea for automatically classifying bookmarks. The authors proposed
    an automated system which takes account of how the user has classified bookmarks in the
    past and how other people with similar interests have also classified their bookmarks. In other
    words find a similar user who has already classified and stored a bookmark and derive a
    recommendation based on what they did.


    Seely Brown’s book The Social Life of Information makes a powerful case for taking account and
    care of the social context in which information exists

    See: http://www.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/cgnm/software/caribo/index_en.html