Purpose
This article looks at the evolving crop of social bookmarking tools, their functionality and examples of use. The goal is to help nonprofits understand the value of using social bookmarking tools and to determine which social bookmarking tool would best serve their needs. This is directed at nonprofit uses of these tools.
Version
The current version of this document is available at:
Updating
The landscape of social bookmarking tools is like the wild west. New tools are appearing (and disappearing) rapidly and the features of specific tools is also changing. Thanks to the open nature (in terms of syndication and APIs if not source) of many of these tools, third party add-ons can provide significant additional functionality. All of this means that the material in the article can become quickly out-of-date. For that reason, this has been set up, in CivicSpace parlance, as a book. This means that is editable by anyone who has a ConsultantCommons.org user account
As new information becomes available, functionality changes, or new tools emerge, please feel free to make updates to this page.
In addition, as this page is being developed, please feel free to add information either by editing the book itself or by leaving a comment.
If you participate in the editing of this document, please include your name and any desired contact information in the "Contributors" section below.
This being developed in response to a suggestion from Beth Kanter
Definitions
Social Bookmarking
Social bookmarking involves saving bookmarks to an online service and "tagging" them with keywords you create instead of saving the bookmarks in your browser's favorite's list. Your collection of bookmarks is viewable to others users who may easily copy bookmarks to their own collection. Social bookmarking enables a you to discover other people who are interested in a topic and know about an excellent web resources that you may not have found by using a search engine. Based on: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_bookmarking] and [http://www.educause.edu/LibraryDetailPage/666?ID=ELI7001]
Social bookmarking tools often allow you to clip all or part of the page you are bookmarking, extensive commenting, thus offering potentially more annotation and content "meaning making."
Tagging
Tagging is a term used in a number of contexts for different purposes, mostly referring to adding a tag of some form. Tags can be thought of as keyword that allow ad hoc classification and sorting of a variety of types of information. Tagging can be applied to URLs (in the case of social bookmarking), photos (flickr), ideas/projects (43 things).
- In many computing and information processing contexts, tagging is the process of labelling a piece of data with metadata.
- Content on webpages is displayed as HTML which uses the construct of HTML tags
- In the practice of collaborative categorization using freely chosen keywords known as folksonomy, Tags are descriptors that individuals assign to objects.
- For instance, in linguistics, a corpus may undergo part-of-speech tagging.
- It is also often used in relation to audio data compression, in which case it refers to adding
- In CVS, to tag a project is to associate a name with the current version of every file in project directory. This is done so that one can easily revert to a state where all files are known to compile together.
RSS(Really Simple Syndication)
RSS is an abbreviation for:
- RSS, a group of XML based web-content distribution and republication (Web syndication) formats primarily used by news sites and weblogs (blogs).
- the Rich Site Summary is also known as RSS 0.9x (although many weblog feeds are full-text, not summaries)
- the RDF Site Summary is based on Netscape's short-lived RSS 0.90, which used the W3CResource Description Framework Standard; this is also known as RSS 1.x
- the Really Simple Syndication is also known as RSS 2.x
- sometimes, by casual (though incorrect) use, alternative syndication protocols, such as Atom.
API(Application Program Interface)
An application programming interface (API) is a set of definitions of the ways one piece of computer software communicates with another. It is a method of achieving abstraction
, usually (but not necessarily) between lower-level and higher-level software.
A more condensed version of the examples here:
http://beth.typepad.com/beths_blog/2005/06/social_bookmark.html
Backflip has been claimed -- webb
[Once the above is gathered, put a table in here]
Try to find a few case studies of current use.
Internal use in an organization
Community of practice to share resources
Publishing lists to blog or web site
Since they are all so new this might, at this point, still be a matter of personal preference but it seems like, by the time we get here, we might be able to make some solid recommendations.
Useful: A beginner's Guide To Delicious
http://www.beelerspace.com/index.php?p=890
Lists of 3rd party tools
Delicious: Complete Plugin/Tools List
http://www.quickonlinetips.com/archives/2005/02/absolutely-delicious-complete-tools-collection/
Other
Alexandra Samuels Delicious Bookmarks on Social Bookmarking: http://del.icio.us/Kossatsch/socialbookmarks
Dlibrary: Social Bookmarking Overview
http://www.dlib.org/dlib/april05/hammond/04hammond.html
[1]This might also be made available as a spreadsheet for download. We need a template ...