Remove Feeds Remove Folksonomy Remove Nptech Remove Search
article thumbnail

Allan Benamer's NpTech Tag Meta Feed Digg Plig Collaborative Search Mashup

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

People who can touch API's out there have been fooling around with trying to extract data from the NpTech tag for analysis as well as think about ways that we can make the data that has been tagged more filtered via social search, collaborative filtering, and whatever else. Deborah Finn's thoughts on the NpTech Tag Mashup.

Mashup 50
article thumbnail

NpTech Tag Cross Blog Discussion: What do those guidelines look like?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Let's begin with big picture question that Gavin raised: What purpose do folksonomies serve? Gavin's post does a great job explaining the definitions and the advantages of a taxonomy over a folksonomy. He observes that folksonomies are in the early stages of development. How are they different from taxonomies? But give it time.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Shoulder-to-Shoulder Instructional Media: My Tagging Screencast at NTEN!

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

You can search for resources by keyword, person, or popularity and see the public bookmarks, tags, and classification schemes that users have created and saved. s a folksonomy. Publishing an RSS Feed of Your Bookmarks onto Your Web Site. For my account, my RSS feed is located at: [link]. Use in combination with search.

article thumbnail

Web 2.0 Part I

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

and then talk a little bit about it’s implications in the nptech field, and then my own view of it from the neo-luddite perspective. I blog, I use Flickr, I search blogs using Technorati, I use del.icio.us And, I think that there is a lot that the nptech field can get from using Web 2.0 At this point, I use Web 2.0

Web 100