Eingehender Vergleich der BM-Tools, Fokus auf akademsichen Nutzern. "In many ways these new tools resemble blogs stripped down to the bare essentials. Here the essential unit of information is a link, not a story"
"They are built to be human-usable (...) are targeted primarily for storage/retrieval of personal information and serendipitous discovery of group information . (...) The development communities for each are abuzz with ideas for exploiting the structure"
"Tagging in and of its self is a helpful step up from no tagging, but is no where near as beneficial as opening the tagging to all. Folksonomy tagging can provide connections across cultures and disciplines (...)"
"Tagging works because it strikes a balance between the individual and social. It serves the individual motive of remembering, and forms a ad-hoc social groups around it."
Folksonomic Flaws?...In this article we look at what makes folksonomies work...We begin by looking at the issue of "sloppy tags", a problem to which critics of folksonomies are keen to allude, and ask if there are ways the folksonomy community could offse
Del.icio.us tags aren’t like meta keyword tags because of the Del.icio.us Lesson. Meta keyword tags provide no personal value whatsoever. All of their value is social. They’re for aggregation engines to find and tell other people about. In other words
M. Grahl, A. Hotho, and G. Stumme. 7th International Conference on Knowledge Management (I-KNOW '07), page 356-364. Graz, Austria, Know-Center, (September 2007)
M. Grahl, A. Hotho, and G. Stumme. 7th International Conference on Knowledge Management (I-KNOW '07), page 356-364. Graz, Austria, Know-Center, (September 2007)
M. Grahl, A. Hotho, and G. Stumme. Workshop Proceedings of Lernen -- Wissensentdeckung -- Adaptivität (LWA 2007), page 50-54. Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, (September 2007)
R. Jäschke, A. Hotho, C. Schmitz, B. Ganter, and G. Stumme. Proceedings of the 6th IEEE International Conference on Data Mining (ICDM 06), page 907-911. Hong Kong, IEEE Computer Society, (December 2006)