Hi Iain,
Hmm, tricky. I received an email telling me that you had added this website to Diigo. I clicked on the link in the email, and could see your highlighting and I could see some sticky notes, but couldn't read them. So I came the Diigo app (from which I am adding this comment) and couldn't see any annotations - just the Wikipedia article. I wonder if anyone else can help?
A little dated (uploaded in 2013) so missing some info on the new outliners features, but otherwise a good little introduction to the hows and whys of using Diigo.
Thanks, I found that useful - now I should use it more. I have been using just my "favourites" for keeping webpages, but I can see scope there for much better organisation. I wonder how other people keep and organise web pages. Obviously we're sharing them in this context as well.
I was considering how useful a site like Diigo will be when we have a number of different devices to access the internet with. All of our bookmarking will be available in the cloud, rather than historically making use of folders on laptop
This was linked to in the article, "14 Ways K-12 Librarians can teach social media" in module 5.2. It looked to be so handy, I was inspired to attempt to use Diigo for the first time for personal bookmarking. Then I thought I may as well try sharing as well.
A new future is coming to education. Online shopping, searching and social networks came first-education is next. OCLC's newest user perceptions study, iAt a Tipping Point: Education, Learning and Libraries/i, explores how empowered consumers, fueled by economic incentives, are using online learning platforms and MOOCs to set new expectations for education-and for libraries. The report explores the behaviors, perceptions and motivations of online learners: how they are evaluating the cost/value trade-offs of higher education, how they are using and succeeding with online education-and their use and perceptions of the library.
I found this on Carole Guert's twitter account. Thanks Carole! It links through to the latest OCLC report. A good comparison to the older version noted in our Modules. Thought you would be interested Gavin.
Is Zuckerberg right when he says "the vast amount of information that users share within Facebook could eventually replace the need to search the web for answers to certain questions"?
I don't share very much..it doesn't come naturally (on line that is).
But this share here is my 1st Diigo post! Following on from my 1st tweet earlier.....Thank god I've got yoga tonight to bring myself back to the real world.