Faviki is a tool that brings together social bookmarking and Wikipedia. It lets you tag your bookmarks using Wikipedia concepts as tags. In Faviki, everybody uses same tags from the world's largest collection of knowledge!
BibSonomy is a system for sharing bookmarks and lists of literature. When discovering a bookmark or a publication on the web, you can store it on our server. You can add tags to your post to retrieve it more easily.
Das freie Verschlagworten von Inhalten aller Art per Social Tagging gehört zu den Anwendungen aus dem Kontext von Web 2.0, die sich zunehmender Beliebtheit er- freuen (Rainie, 2007). Während nach einem breiten Verständnis mit dem Begriff Tags alle Arte
BibSonomy is run by the Knowledge & Data Engineering Group of the University of Kassel, Germany. This system is intended to support everyone, but in particular researchers, in sharing bookmarks and bibliographies. One main reason is that we have to deal w
edutagger is a social bookmarking service for K-12 learners and educators, allowing you to store your web links online and share them with others, all within an educational context.
It’s been four and a half months since Yahoo first previewed Delicious 2.0. We’ve heard not a peep from them since as to when it might launch publicly and replace the existing, somewhat dated interface.
After analyzing a large amount of social annotations, we found that tags are usually semantically related to each other if they are used to tag the same or related resources for many times. Users may have similar interests if their annotations share many
After analyzing a large amount of social annotations, we found that tags are usually semantically related to each other if they are used to tag the same or related resources for many times. Users may have similar interests if their annotations share many
G. Koutrika, F. Effendi, Z. Gyöngyi, P. Heymann, und H. Garcia-Molina. AIRWeb '07: Proceedings of the 3rd international workshop on Adversarial information retrieval on the web, Seite 57--64. New York, NY, USA, ACM Press, (2007)