March 2006
Folksonomies: Tags Strengths, Weaknesses And How To Make Them Work - Robin Good's Latest News
by ycc2106 & 2 others* Misspelt tags (e.g., libary, libray)
* Badly encoded tags, such as unlikely compound word groupings (e.g.,TimBernersLee)
* Tags that do not follow convention in issues such as case and number; singular versus plural form (e.g., apple, apples)
* Personal tags that are without meaning to the wider community (e.g., mydog)
* Single-use tags that appear only once in the database. (e.g., billybobsdog)
February 2006
Folksonomies: Tidying up Tags?
by bcpbcp & 9 others (via)1. Introduction
A folksonomy is a type of distributed classification system. It is usually created by a group of individuals, typically the resource users. Users add tags to online items, such as images, videos, bookmarks and text. These tags are then shared and sometimes refined. A general review of social bookmarking tools, one popular use area of folksonomies, was given in the April edition of D-Lib [1]. In the article the authors elaborate on the approach taken by social classification systems and the motivators behind tagging. They write, "...tags are just one kind of metadata and are not a replacement for formal classification systems such as Dublin Core, MODS, etc.... Rather, they are a supplemental means to organise information and order search results."
October 2005
Wired News: RSS Service Eases Bloggers' Pain
by bcpbcpAdding links by hand is both time-consuming and ineffective for those who can't spend 24 hours a day watching for breaking news. Relying on RSS feeds means fresh headlines, but the clutter of irrelevant content.Now, many bloggers are turning to a new service called TagCloud that lets them cherry-pick articles in RSS feeds by key words -- or tags -- that appear in those feeds.
April 2005
Picking Up Where Search Leaves Off
by François Hodierne & 2 othersUn article de Business Week sur les tags.
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(5 marks)