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2voteSome papers on ontologies, folksonomies, and social bookmarking
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3voteC&RL News, February 2007 Vol. 68, No. 2: Suppose you are starting to research a current topic—wikis in the library or new developments in electronic resources management, perhaps. You have some current books on the subject and have printed a few articles off the library databases. But much of the most current information is on the Internet, in blogs and news articles, or maybe on the sites of libr
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4voteThis is an extensive post, revealing the results of a statistical comparison between Amazon and LibraryThing tags, and exploring why tagging has turned out relatively poorly for Amazon. I end by making concrete recommendations for ecommerce sites interested in making tagging work.
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3voteComparing social tagging and subject cataloguing; this paper identifies the points of similarity and difference that obtain between these two kinds of information organization frameworks. The subsequent comparative analysis of the parts of these frameworks points to the nature of indexing as an authored, personal, situational, and referential act, where differences in discursive placement divide..
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2voteBy: Gordon-Murnane, Laura, Searcher, 10704795, Jun2006, Vol. 14, Issue 6 Database: Academic Search Premier
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2voteNeat blog that the UPenn librarians maintain to discuss their emerging technology integrations.
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1voteFor the past several months in my group at Lucent we've been testing out a system developed to be a simple self-service publishing application. You might recognize the interface. It follows the model other social bookmarking services have made common.
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