This personal classification of web content allows for collaboration in information gathering and easy sharing of relevant sites of interest. Why is this a "social software" and not just a personal customization? As Sinha states, this allows for like-minded individuals to share their findings and their tags. This makes the communication of collaborative research efforts much easier. Our tagging of sites with the 'LIS 757' tag is a great example. We are able to share articles, comment on articles, maintain lists of links very easily. Otherwise...we would be sending millions of emails with "Hey check this out!" note (or really, further in the past...passing out a printed bibliography or memos of useful resources that would need to be located all over again). I think that it provides a way to communicate and organize findings in a manner that is convenient and useful to both the finder and the others in their research group.
Beyond groups that are explicitly linked together, tagging allows for researchers to find other like-minded individuals and follow their findings as well.
What I like about distributed research via tagging & bookmarking:
- ease of access to the information tagged (a simple click takes you there)
- the ability to create a collaborative group 'bibliography' with various tags that represent various perspectives/subject divisions
- the ability to share these findings within a larger community (imagine some LIS student writing a paper on social software in public libraries...what a jackpot if she discovers the 'LIS 757' del.icio.us tag!).
- moving beyond an author's or professional's interpretation of their work and providing more relevant references. I think this is very striking if you think of, for example, a media student tagging links: what the item is "about" (i.e. George Bush commenting on Iraq on location at some ranch) may have very little to do with why the media student is interested in it, tagging allows for a very focussed classification (i.e. media images of the 'modern cowboy').
- great for new and current topics which may have not been well categorized or identified in mainstream circles yet - this may be especially relevant for new technologies.
- tagging is so easy that its seems that only slightly relevant items are often tagged
- when not used well, or with no additional tagging, commenting, or organization - it feels a bit like a pile of articles dropped on your desk with no explanation of why they are there.
5 comments:
I definitely agree with the over-tagging of only-slightly relevant items as a significant disadvantage. I think it shows up in several of the case studies this week (as well as my own del.icio.us).
Hmm, I've managed to change my display name. Let's see if I've succesful changed it back..
I like your comment that tags are a bit like a pile of articles--I agree that they are very disorganized. The choice of tags seems so arbitrary, and whereas one person tags in depth, another person hardly uses any tags at all. Trying to retrieve information with such inconsistency seems very hard.
I agree there is some much potential, and the hypothetical MLS student out there in the world finding our little tagging community would be a great resource, but does that happen often I wonder- with so many tags with so many meanings the chances that somebody would choose to follow up on the very ambiguous 'lis757' seems unlikely- I am saying this because I think it points out the disadvantages. However our lis757 tag works great between us. I think social software at this point works well for specific communities- for tagging I agree that PennTags seems to work well while other do not.
Hi Joanne
I'm in agreement as to the choice of tags beinging so arbitrary. I'm still trying to figure out why an aricle on Melvin Dewey is tagged 'hunk'.
Gerry
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