del.icio.us bookmarks for Saturday July 08 2006
08-July-2006
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A del.icio.us study | i d e a n t: Bookmark, Classify and Share: A mini-ethnography of social practices in a distributed classification community [December 27, 2004]
'[Note: This is a project I did for a class on social and communicative aspects of the internet, taught by Chuck Kinzer. Not a 'real' study, but you might find some of the literature review and listed resources helpful. You may also want to check out a mo
/analysis categorising/practice categorising/theory del.icio.us for:alharris for:rgedwards for:wlp opendock social-bookmarking theory/online-collaboration web2.0/theory -
Tag Literacy | i d e a n t: [April 26, 2005] '...a short introduction to what distributed classification systems allow you to do with tags, and how to generate tags to maximize the social value of these systems.
'..point of distributed classification systems (DCSs eg del.icio.us, flickr).. aggregation of inherently private (tags and what they describe) has public value.. I explore 2 aspects of intersection: open affordances of DCSs; linguistic properties of tags
/analysis categorising/practice categorising/theory del.icio.us for:alharris for:rgedwards for:wlp opendock resources/introductory social-bookmarking theory/online-collaboration to-do web2.0/theory -
Del.icio.us Mobile | Micro Persuasion: 'Del.icio.us has a hidden feature that lets you create a stripped down version of your bookmarks for viewing on a mobile device. I have tested this on my Blackberry and it works beautifully. Here are four of the basi
1: Bookmarks and Descriptions: del.icio.us/html/username/?extended=body&tags=no&rssbutton=no| 2: Bookmarks Only: ?tags=no&rssbutton=no | 3: Bookmarks and Tags: ?&rssbutton=no | 4: Increase the Bookmark Count to 100: ?&rssbutton=no&count=100
/APIs/del.icio.us architectures/REST del.icio.us for:alharris moblogging opendock power-tips/web2.0 recommended resources/best-practice snugget social-bookmarking to-do webtech/mobile -
The Importance of RSS | Particletree: This essay started out as an explanation for Google's foray into personal portal pages, but morphed into "a comprehensive breakdown of the state of RSS, taxonomies, advertising, and how it relates to the future of Goo
'What follows is the result of several months of observation, notes and contemplation. Google is successful because Google works on projects that are important. I don’t mean this in the sense that they work on philanthropic tech projects that warm our h
/analysis analysis/patterns google opendock rss/uses theory/online-collaboration theory/web-semantics web2.0/biz web2.0/issues webcontent/trends webtech/attention webtech/syndication
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