I was reading online the other day and someone said they were
looking for a visualization of social bookmarking systems to show
people who were totally unfamiliar with them. (I can’t find the
post right now, but I’ll update this when I find the link.) I took
a shot at this because it might be useful for my thesis. It’s just
not simple to illustrate, so I’m not sure how effective this will
be. I did this in Illustrator, so if you want to modify it here’s
the .ai
file.
When you view a social bookmarking system by web page you’re
seeing all of the users that have saved the page to the system, as
well as the tags they assigned to it. When you view a system by tag
you’re seeing all of the web pages assigned by particular users to
a particular tag. Tags can’t exist without web pages assigned to
them. When you view a system by user you’re seeing all of web pages
and tags a person has saved to the system. It’s easy to pivot
between these three views, usually with one click.
What’s not shown here is that the default method of organization
of items under each view is time. A secondary method is
“popularity,” which differs based on which of the three views
you’re in. In web page view you could see what the popular tags are
for that page, you could also see how many users saved it. In tag
view you could see the most popular web pages in that tag - which
is calculated based on a mix of recency and overall number of users
who have that page in their collection. In user view you could see
which tags that person has applied the most frequently - although I
wouldn’t call that popularity exactly.
The best way to explain social bookmarking is probably just to
do a tour through the system, although even with that I’ve had
mixed success in a presentation type of setting.
November 4, 2005
The proposition, as explained on memography.org, is
simple. Create a globally unique string or meme ID. Paste this
string into relevant web pages. Wait for search engines to crawl
the pages. Then use the meme ID to search with 100% precision and
recall. And you can even create an aboutness page to define your
meme, so others can use it properly.
The above is from a very interesting post over at
findability.org titled The Memetic
Web which references memography.org. I didn’t have a
chance to look into memography.org much directly, so what I’m
responding to is the post on findability.
If I hadn’t had experience with my own name and making up
globally unique strings, both by accident and on purpose, I might
think it was more difficult than it actually is. To add a little
evidence beyond my own experience, the people who run the site
Connotea, which is for sharing academic references a la social
bookmarking, wrote up a case
study of their own service where they found that 14% (460) of
the unique tags (3359) on Connotea were used by more than one
person - that is, 86% of tags are unique strings within that system
(!). Although it’s a relatively small sample I think it’s
fascinating.
I use one tag on del.icio.us that I’d like to be more popular
(or at least not unique), metablogosphere, which
I use for sites that visualize or search in some fashion a large
number of blogs. I was using this tag more when I was doing a
research project on blogs, but I’ve never blogged or otherwise
promoted metablogosphere. When I first started on blog research I
thought it would be presumptuous to announce my ‘new’ term, and I
was waiting to find the ‘real’ term. Also, how many people are
actually interested in this? And would they notice and use this
term? The ‘risk’ didn’t seem to outweigh the ‘reward’ - although
that’s a dramatic way to put it.
Another case is aoir6 - which my class and I proposed as a tag
for the Association of Internet Researchers sixth annual meeting.
We used the tag for blog posts via Technorati Tags, for bookmarks
in del.icio.us and for photos on Flickr. The string aoir6 didn’t
exist 6 months ago (and not much beyond 3 months ago) and I did a
search on Google just now and got 9,910 results, all related to the
conference from what I can see.
So, in short, I can see what’s interesting about globally unique
strings. My examples above have been related to tags, and I see the
subject of globally unique strings and tagging as very densely
intertwined.
One problem I see is that people get attached to their
inventions, so if you have competing strings for a particular
concept (i.e. someone has something that already means what I mean
by metablogosphere) and I go out and promote my string, then you
perhaps have 100% personal / sphere of influence accuracy but not a
truly global type of tool. Maybe that’s not such a problem since
it’s silly to think we could have a truly global agreement.
The corollary problem is that others start using a string with a
different definition in mind. This is what has happened to
folksonomy, which is somewhat
vexing to it’s originator. This is a much more sticky problem.
Does it mean what the person who originated it intended, or does it
mean what most people intend when they use it? Being a bottom-up
kind of person I favor the latter, but probably not if it were my
invention :)
October 25, 2005
I’ve been alerted to a survey that is a pretty straightforward
“Attempt to Discover what Social Bookmarking Users consider the
Most Important and Desired Features in a Bookmark Manager.” The
folks at blinklist.com are conducting the survey (which is more
like a pole with an open ended question rather than a full survey).
They’re going to share the results, so I’m looking forward to that.
Any value that comes out of it will have to do with how many people
actually put some thought into answering the question, which is
never predictable. I’m sure anyone who reads this is quite
thoughtful, so please share at:
http://www.mindvalley.com/socialbookmarking/
My answer was: Well, I love visualizations, which I usually see
done by third parties with delicious data. I also love exploring to
find new sites, although this process is a bit frustrating because
I’m always going off on a tangent and I forget what I started off
looking for. I’m generally pretty focused, but exploring these SBS
I’ll start off looking for resources on social network analysis and
end up on a page rating brands of swiss cheese. I’m one of those
productivity people so this drives me nuts - except when my tangent
takes me to something useful for what I’m working on. I think
social bookmarking is going to become more mainstream but it will
take some time to convince people to add one more system to their
lives.
October 18, 2005
What I’m referring to as “personal data mining” here is not
finding personal information about yourself or others, but looking
back at things you’ve done (blogging, bookmarking, anything else)
and trying to find meaning through visualization or other
reconfiguration of the material.
I see this particularly with del.icio.us where several tools
have appeared that help you to do this. One from a while back is
extisp.icio.us - which
describes itself as “extispicious, a. [L. extispicium an inspection
of the innards for divination; extra the entrails + specer to look
at.] Relating to the inspection of entrails for prognostication.”
Other tools try to extract hierarchical groupings or provide
scripts to get a list of your favorite interests (kind of a weird
thing to extract when you think about it).
It reminds me of the archaeology class I had where we learned
the value of trash pits for finding out how people lived. If I just
think about my own garbage you could tell quite a bit about me if
you took a careful look it’d be easy to find out - what I study,
what kind of food I eat, junk mail, magazines, when I have a cold
(like now, lots of tissues). The problem is that there’s not a good
(well, easy) way for me to learn from my trash, or the paper
folders I have, or the way I organize my closet–physical stuff. It
doesn’t have a time stamp or metadata I can call upon to
re-envision it, but many of the things I do on my computer can be
re-envisioned this way.
Data mining is generally a many-to-few communication, but with
personal data mining (perhaps self data mining is better - but that
just sounds wrong) it’s un-reflexive self over time to analytical
self at fixed points.
Since nothing is really new, I’d be interested to know what the
related phenomena or antecedents to this sort of thing are?
September 20, 2005
I’m not quite caught up with all the new stuff out there on
tagging, but I wanted to make a comment on the issue below from
this post at plasticbag
Matt Webb and I did a fair amount of work around
tagging with a project called Phonetags that I never get time to
properly write up. As we were working on it, we came to realise
that each of us had a radically different understanding of what a
tag was. Matt’s concept was quite close to the way tagging is used
in del.icio.us - with an individual the only person who could tag
their stuff and with an understanding that the act of tagging was
kind of an act of filing. My understanding was heavily influenced
by Flickr’s approach - which I think is radically different - you
can tag other people’s photos for a start, and you’re clearly
challenged to tag up a photo with any words that make sense to you.
It’s less of a filing model than an annotative one.
The article in general is quite interesting. My take, though, is
that the file metaphor and the annotation metaphor are not so much
based on the service (flickr vs delicious) but on the purposes of
the user. I was just reading in a book Learner-Centered
Design by Wayne Reeves that “deliberate categories [are] those
designed by the individuals to meet some goal” p. 103 - and clearly
tags are deliberate categories - and clearly Matt and Tom have
different goals.
September 7, 2005
As anyone who has spent much time on social content web sites
(flickr, delicious, etc.) knows, or takes for granted, popular does
equal good. I’m not making philosophical claims but practical ones.
If many people put a bookmark or photo in their personal collection
it’s pretty likely that it’s useful or at least interesting. This
is not quantifiable (well, perhaps, if someone wants to take that
on) but it’s easy to experience for yourself on these sites.
The Daily Mashup really
has something good going on. It’s just a combination of Flickr Interesting, Delicious & Furl popular and Yahoo news most
clicked. A simple daily internet zeitgeist. If I didn’t have lots
of things to get done I’d make it my home page.
I’d love to have a customizable version of this with lots of
display options for any feed view full text, mash up with other
feeds in a cloud, pick out the popular things within several tag
feeds, and so on with a nice fast ajax interface. Maybe I’ll hack
something together until this exists.
To clarify, I don’t think this should be anyone’s sole interface
to the web leading to tyranny of the masses. Search is still
incredibly valuable & someone has to put these sites on the map
in the first place and when you’re talking about specific tags you
can find the rare gems also.
August 31, 2005
A legitimate issue with tagging / folksonomy as it exists today
is that there is no way to distinguish the level of abstraction
that the tag represents (see this article for
this gripe as well as many unfounded ones I might address in
another post). There is no parent/child relationship among tags and
so no hierarchy. Why is this a problem? I have this uncontrollable
urge to see some order in my tag set and I don’t think I’m
alone. When bundles came out on del.icio.us I jumped right on it.
Tag clouds (like this and
this) are another way
to see some order but for my personal stuff a cloud was
unsatisfying.
Enter RawSuger - which
is, according to David
Weinberger “a searchable del.icio.us with automagic,
hierarchical clustering.” The impact of this automatic hierarchy
will of course depend on how well it actually works - I’ve not
tried it - but the possibility is exciting. Why have I not tried
it? Tagging is about the community & until RawSuger gains
critical mass I can’t see myself switching from del.icio.us because
of a single feature, although I might try it when I have a little
time.
August 27, 2005
I checked my Feedburner stats recently and it looks like there
is quite a bit of interest in the new new media course–or the title
was just more interesting than usual. Either way, I’ll give an
update.
The tagging is a go at AoIR -
it’s is even going to be in the program. Also, we may be setting up
a back channel chat room during some panels. Right now the research
questions for these projects are still a bit murky but we’ll work
that out before October. I’m thinking the tagging project will
probably be pretty focussed on the real world issues of the commons
and how to grow them online, but we’ll see.
Right now I’m bracing myself for a hectic semester with working
on my thesis, teaching two sections of a class, and taking this
grad class. Good think I like all of this work.
June 13, 2005
Abstract: Social bookmarking systems let users store,
classify and share their bookmarks online. They are global
grassroots classification systems. Classification is a basic mental
process that determines how we see (or ignore) the world. The first
social bookmarking system was del.icio.us which came online in late
2003. I performed a pilot study of a survey of del.icio.us users
focusing on feedback, motivation, and collectivity. The paper
linked below is an abbreviated version of a term paper submitted
for a graduate methods course in communication this past spring
term. I plan to continue researching this topic for my master’s
thesis over the coming year.
You can read the presentation on the Kairosnews site, or as a
PDF
here, or watch it as a
QuickTime movie here.