I have to tell you that I have begun so many of these potential lists in a new book each time, only to lose track of them or misplace the book. Now I have the answer to my problem!
Notes:
Folksonomies and Tagging
producing, commenting and classifying
- tagging allows keywords to associate with online content - thus considered a folksonomy, aka an unstructured catergorisation scheme.
- Library of Congress suubject headings (largest categorisation scheme on planet) is more formalised and considered a taxonomy.
Examples:
- Del.icio.us http://delicious.com/ Allows save bookmarks to central location that can be accessed anywhere. (I could do this with my library reference material for future use).
- AskNow www.asknow.gov.au/delicious
I like: www.bartleby.com/
Great books Online - Quotes, Poems, Novels, classics, etc.
Medical - www.mydr.com.au/
- Library Thing - online catalogue of your personal book collection = social networking/tagging benefits. ( I have been using Library Thing to keep tabs of what I have been reading because I can rate it, post comments for my own benefit, and have all the publishing information at my fingertips because the site can do this automatically for you. The other useful thing I found was that some small/private libraries can use this as a means of cataloguing their collections.)
- Shelfari www.shelfari.com create virtual shelf to show off your books + network.
- Gurulib www.gurulib.com/ catalogue books, movies, music, games and software + connect + share (reviews, etc.)
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