Skip to main content

Home/ Diigo Community/ Group items tagged folksonomy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Maggie Tsai

Family Matters: Create a tagging schema - 1 views

  • Create a tagging schema taxonomy: (n) the study of the general principles of scientific classification If you've had anything to do with organizing information, you've heard this term.  In the web world, site managers spend weeks developing classification systems for their content so their search features will work properly.  Now for a new version - folksonomy.  Folksonomy is the same thing as taxonomy only without the education.  Folksonomy describes the grassroots classification systems developing as more and more "tag" platforms appear online.  While some  tags are appearing as standards, it's still quite a free-for-all out there. 
  • I use Diigo to manage my bookmarks.  Anytime I find a page I want to save, I tell Diigo to bookmark it for me using the tags I assign that page.   Later - when I want a list of all the genealogy blogs I've bookmarked - I just click on my "genblog" tag on my Diigo page to view them. Because I have included surname tags on all the family photos I've uploaded to Flickr, I can send anyone requesting Barker information one link that displays all my Barker photo collection. The related articles section at the bottom of this post was created using Diigo to display all the links I've saved related to a specific topic (tag).
  • Because I use these systems daily, I've created my own tag system - a folksonomy - that I use across each of the different tagging applications/platforms I use.  For genealogy items I use the following tags: genealogy (for everything genealogy) genblog (any blog dealing with genealogy topics) genapp (genealogy software) gendex (a genealogy index - like Cindi's List) genpub (a genealogy publication) gendata (a genealogy data source) surnames for each family I'm researching location names - city, county and state - for areas I'm researching Every tagging site allows multiple tags.  I bookmark every article I write beginning with my site tag (familymatters for this blog) and then topic specific tags.  That [and Diigo's tools] is how I'm able to collect my earlier posts for a related articles list.  It's so flexible that I can create a list of only my articles or any articles I've bookmarked with a specific topic keyword. Tags are becoming an important component of your research toolbox so spend a few minutes developing a plan - a folksonomy - of keywords for your research.  Anyone who's interested in developing a standard for genealogy tags, please let me know in the comments.  My tags are very handy for my research, but "our" tags can help us all!
  •  
    You can making over $59.000 in 1 day. Look this www.killdo.de.gg
Graham Perrin

Social bookmarking - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

  • chronologically
    • Graham Perrin
       
      Diigo 3.x allowed the user to view bookmarks chronologically, by date of creation. That feature is missing from Diigo 4.0 beta.
  • Diigo entered the bookmarking field
  • inferences from the relationship of tags to create clusters
  • ...22 more annotations...
  • In 2006
  • Social bookmarking
  • the resources themselves aren't shared, merely bookmarks that reference them
  • share, organize, search, and manage
  • understand the content
  • without first needing to download
  • metadata
  • tags that collectively or collaboratively become a folksonomy
  • votes
  • comments
  • social tagging
  • shared only with specified people or groups
  • usually public
  • chronologically
  • the number of users who have bookmarked
  • import and export
  • web annotation
  • no central controlled vocabulary
  • converge over time
  • drawbacks to such tag-based systems
    • Graham Perrin
       
      Common Tag format may address most of these issues. 
  • no standard set of keywords
  • no standard for the structure of such tags (e.g., singular vs. plural, capitalization)
Maggie Tsai

NeoArch - 0 views

  • NeoArch July 25, 2006 Diigo Criticism Filed under: diigo — NeoArch @ 8:52 am Diigo Launches, Nobody Cares - Mashable* Diigo is being criticized over on Mashable for being just one more social bookmarking site. That’s all well and good. I guess when you create a new social tool you should expect that–unless, of course, you create a good one. And that, my friends, is what Diigo is. So in answer to the who cares question, I offer the following: Who cares? Bloggers. Trust me. I am one. On several blogs. A large part of blogging is just countering other bloggers. It’s sorta like what I am doing now. Who am I kidding? It is what I am doing now. The advantage to bloggers is twofold. First, Diigo allows you to store your notes right on the page of the blog with which you disagree. Second, Diigo has blog functionality that lets you blog right from Diigo. Which is what I am doing now. Tagging and blogging can occur seamlessly. And it allows you to have multiple blogs. Try doing that with the Performancing plugin (which I love.) Who cares? Researchers. They have wanted a tool like this for years. I don’t know how many times I have wanted to put marginalia on a blog like I do my books. Now I can. Others can as well. I am a librarian in an academic institution. Trust me. Researchers will use this. Who cares? Anyone who uses the web. This is the type of tool that has a wide appeal, especially for those who do not already use a social bookmarking service. This one IS better than others. This one DOES offer something others don’t. This one DOESN’T just clip text. This one puts your notes right where you want them. Hey, I realize there is some truth to the Web 2.x hype. Who wants another social site that has a name that sounds like a Star Wars character. Put if you’re going to fault Diigo for anything, fault it for having a stupid name. Don’t fault it for competing in crowded space. It fills a need for many people, just like all the mom and pop Linux distros out there do. It is marketable, as is evidenced by the fact that over 10,000 people signed up for the Diigo Beta test.
  • You should know about Diigo! Filed under: Uncategorized, Technology, folksonomy, diigo — NeoArch @ 9:09 am To those of you who read this blog on a regular basis, I want to apologize for posting infrequently lately. I have had a couple other projects that I have been working on, plus my Church had vacation Bible school last week. You don’t get much done during VBS week. I just wanted to take the time to inform you about a new social bookmarking service. For those of you who already have one, you’re probably groaning, “Not another one!” I know. I know. I have been using Del.icio.us for…well…forever. I can’t remember life before Del.icio.us. In fact, I have no intentions on ceasing from using Del.icio.us. (With Diigo and its toolbar, I don’t have to, but more on that in another post.) For those of you who don’t have a social bookmarking service…well…you need one. Social bookmarking is a way to keep track of all of the websites that you visit. It allows you to describe the page using several one word “tags.” For example, if you visited the page for “Talladega Nights,” you might tag it as “movie,” “Will_Ferrell,” “stupid,” and “NASCAR.” This may seem like a useless service until you cannot find that page with the thing that you needed for your job and now you’re gonna get fired cause you can’t produce what you said you could. Or perhaps you can’t find that online add for that ring for your wife that you saw that would save you $1000 so now you can’t get a new johnboat because you don’t have the extra $$$$ you would have saved. Trust me. You need one. There are several out there. Diigo is different, though. The service is only in beta testing at this point, so you have to actually request an invitation to participate. Diigo not only lets you save a bookmark to the page, but it also allows you to highlight content. It lets you add virtual sticky notes to the page. This really is the ideal tool for research and blogs. You can access your thoughts about a certain web page from anywhere in the world, right on the web page. How many times have you wished that blogs and webpages worked like books. You wish that you could add marginalia. You wish that the marginalia could be either public or private. It’s all possible with Diigo.
  • Don’t just take my word for it. Go try out Diigo’s playground for yourself. If you don’t think the service is the coolest thing since Cocoa Pebbles (it’s like cereal, only chocolaty), then walk away from your keyboard, go get in your 1973 Ford Maverick, throw in your favorite Captain and Tenille 8-track, and …well… you get the picture. I have just started using Diigo in the past few days, so I will have more to say about it later. However, I do think that this is one of the best social bookmarking sites that I have used. Long live Diigo!
    • Maggie Tsai
       
      diigo
  •  
    How to make $ 40,000 in one month with very quickly. What you need. The latest American news article. Immediately visit www.killdo.de.gg www.fiverr.de.gg www.newss.de.gg www.reddit.de.gg www.newsbbc.de.gg
Graham Perrin

Adding Suggested Tags - 56 views

Dataloss: caution Whilst Post to Diigo is good for gaining recommendations, it overwrites existing tags. Personally, I use the combination of Diigo Meta, Post to Diigo, Diigolet, my ...

feature tag suggestion suggestions suggest suggested recommended recommend recommendation recommendations Post to Diigo

Moultrie Creek

Family Matters: Folksonomy - Tagging Lessons Learned - 3 views

  •  
    You can making over $59.000 in 1 day. Look this www.killdo.de.gg
Jeff Andersen

7 Things You Should Know About Social Bookmarking | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

  •  
    "7 Things You Should Know About... Social Bookmarking" addresses a communityâ€"or socialâ€"approach to identifying and organizing information on the Web. Social bookmarking involves saving bookmarks one would normally make in a Web browser to a public Web site and "tagging" them with keywords. The community-driven, keyword-based classifications, known as "folksonomies," may change how we store and find information online.
anonymous

vote feature - 145 views

Anyone know how I undo a mistaken "thumbs up"? I accidentally "thumbed up" my own bookmark (I clicked once on the icon hoping to find a thumbs down option.) Unlike Flickr and YouTube, my clumsy v...

vote thumbs up down measure rate rank important star suggestion spam (electronic)

Peggy George

Best Practices - Diigo - 21st Century Tool for Research, Reading and Collaboration - 1 views

  • the first great thing about Diigo is that your bookmarks follow you wherever you go.  When you bookmark a site using your Diigo account, you can have access to it at work, home, the computer lab or library.  The other great thing is that once you bookmark it, you can share your book mark links with students and colleagues and they can all have access to your sites.   
  • The next big plus to Diigo is that you get to “tag” the sites you want to bookmark.  A tag is the classification system you determine so you can organize your bookmarks and find the link the next time you need it; this is known as a folksonomy. 
    • Peggy George
       
      A real bonus to the tagging of sites in Diigo is that you can use multiple tags. A single site may include great resources for math, science and social studies and you don't need to file the bookmark in a single folder. Just add multiple tags.
  • On the sticky note the teacher could ask questions and Diigo allows people to comment and reply to the questions on the sticky note.  Students could also add sticky notes for other students to comment on as well.  Another way to use the highlighting tool is that students could go through an article and highlight all of the vocabulary that they didn’t know and learn what it means prior to reading the article.  Or students could put sticky notes about questions they have when reading the text. 
  •  
    Diigo - 21st Century Tool for Research, Reading and Collaboration
  •  
    Diigo - 21st Century Tool for Research, Reading and Collaboration
Graham Perrin

Teachers Teaching Teachers #165 - 08.26.09 - Meet Lisa Dick and George Haines: Talking ... - 0 views

  • transcript of a chat
  • the beefier elements (past what Delicious can do)
  • I have Diigo installed on my iPhone too! it's great!
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • Diigo has an educator account so the bookmarks are private and students can only see other students; no one can see their profiles
  • toolbar is good, but it will be a struggle to get it added
  • such a great session with Maggie Tsai!! :-)
  • maintain both Delicious and Diigo accounts but only enter bookmarks on Diigo
  • I used Diigo as a "one stop shop" for resources I used in my PD at the beginning of the year.  It worked really well.
  • Jennifer Dorman has compiled some excellent resource for learning about Diigo
  • searching for tags from my contacts
  • Diigo is always the first place I go for my resources
  • fear is a powerful, paralyzing thing
  • Maggie is very approachable - anyone with questions about diigo should feel free to contact her
  • thought needs to go into the creation of student accounts
  • avoid kids having multiple accounts
  • Diigo is so responsive to feedback
  • Maggie would love to join you on ETT!! She's eager to talk to educators!
  • Delicious has tag suggestions from your own folksonomy.  Miss that with diigo
Graham Perrin

My Languages: Skype Interview : Social Bookmarking - 0 views

  • Michèle Drechsler is an “inspector of the Education Nationale” in France. She manages a district of 260 teachers.
  • What are the changes caused by the new technologies for the professional training against the KM (Knowledge Management) and Cops (community of practices) paradigm?
  • Teaching resources on line and Web2.0.Indexing, bookmarking and folksonomy
  • ...25 more annotations...
  • reflect on my social bookmarking practices
  • What were the most important reasons for you to join Diigo?
  • I usually start going through my Diigo emails
  • with like-minded people
  • Diigo group
  • a very effective way to keep up to date with cutting edge practice
  • easier to identify people who have common interests
  • maximise the exchanges
  • easily trackable by rss
  • (immediate or weekly) emails
  • How do you manage your subscriptions?
  • much more potential to share
  • I have joined quite a few Diigo groups
  • manage the information according to the time available
  • quick check, save on Diigo or
  • as a reminder to read the article or the report later
  • send a shortcut to my computer
  • Key words need to be standardized
  • s a protocol necessary
  • to determine a common vocabulary
  • or is self-regulation best?
  • too restricting to regulate for a whole group
  • different languages
  • I do not think it makes any difference
  • Does socialbookmarking enable you to be innovative?
  •  
    Thanks to Isabelle Jones for sharing. In this interview we find some interesting observations on where Diigo fits (sometimes, between other things).
Graham Perrin

Diigo Feature Request: (Post Which New Features u want to see in Diigo) - 119 views

> thumbnail screen-shot Please enable e-mail notification for http://groups.diigo.com/group/Diigo_HQ/content/548838 (2008-03-28), New feature: medium-size thumbnail with readable info for each b...

Diigo feature request feature requests feature features suggestion thumbnail

1 - 11 of 11
Showing 20 items per page