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BibSonomy allows users of library catalogues (OPAC) to collect and manage the information they retrieved from the catalogue.
Social bookmarking enhances search, collection and management of digital information. It allows participants to contribute and share information. Users can store the bibliographic information which they retrieved from the OPAC library catalogue and annotate it with their personal comments. They can also explore the resources of others, enlarging their own collection with interesting objects and being guided through the vast amount of information sources.
BibSonomy supports library users by offering additional features besides simply storing bookmarks and publications:
Here are some examples of how to integrate BibSonomy with OPAC library catalogues and e-learning systems.
The digital library of the University of Cologne promotes the idea of integrating libraries with user-created bookmarking systems. They offer a simple link to the BibSonomy publication metadata interface where you can add tags and cross-check the reference data fields. Clicking on the green button shown in the library's snapshot below leads to BibSonomy. Users can then change and store their entries.

The KUG page also shows related tags to a resource in the right menu bar. If you click on one of those tags, you can browse further publications and bookmarks related to the clicked tag. The related resources are either retrieved from the library or from BibSonomy. This allows users to view a broader set of resources than only the library's entries without having to switch to the BibSonomy interface. Shortly, the mirrow feature will be activated. If users then add keywords to a resource in the KUG interface, the keywords will be automatically added to their BibSonomy entries. If the title did not exist in the user's BibSonomy resource list, it is stored automatically. Thus, the user's local collection is maintained automatically in the social bookmarking system.
The digital library of the University of Heidelberg offers to store the metadata of books and other publications in BibSonomy. A link is offered at the bottom of a specific book description (example).
Moodle is a popular e-learning environment. BibSonomy can enhance course descriptions and e-learning projects by providing the corresponding literature, e.g. via RSS-feed. An example for an integration of BibSonomy into Moodle can be found at http://educampus.uni-kassel.de/?p=110. An explanation is given below.