Wednesday 25 June 2008

Five Star Food – Folksonomies, Taxonomies and the Hybrid


Having worked in the world of taxonomies for just under a year I have heard a lot about the use of taxonomies and folksonomies (otherwise known as social tagging where the categorisation of information is done by the end user), both in general and in the Enterprise workspace. Comments that I have heard and read have tended to be either pro-folksonomies or pro-taxonomies. Both arguments in my humble opinion appeared to be flawed, not so much because of the basis of the arguments, but from the fact that the statements are rarely objective.

I have just finished reading an excellent ebook by Daniela Barbosa which tackles this subject, advocating a hybrid approach in an objective, balanced and light-hearted manner. I say light-hearted as the ebook is written in the style of a cookery book - including comic style illustrations of the head chef herself. It sounds unusual, but is a very refreshing way to read about what is essentially a corporate/technical subject that all too often comes across as stuffy and boring.

Daniela takes the concepts of traditional taxonomies and social tagging, highlighting the pros and cons of each method for organising a company’s information (information coming in many forms such as web pages, podcasts and photos, not just the traditional documents such as word, excel and powerpoint). She examines the fears and misconceptions of the introduction of social tagging in to a corporate environment.

When you are focused on one particular approach it is easy to become blinkered in thinking that yours is the correct way of doing things and dismiss other ideas on an incomplete understanding. One thing that really caught my eye when talking about the use of social tagging for example (speaking from the viewpoint of a taxonomist) was how they can eliminate the need for focus groups to decide on how the corporate taxonomy needs to be expanded or amended. "In the past, information professionals conducted quarterly or biannual updates that might have required time-consuming focus groups and/or indepth interviews with group leaders. Tagging provides a continuous stream of refreshed metadata for evaluation." The participation of the end users by their tagging of the content also helps to gain a crucial consumer/user perspective, since the categorisation of the information exists for their benefit in the first place.

The cookbook then looks at the potential benefits of a hybrid system, taking the best of both worlds. Daniela details the benefits to the enterprise of this approach in a concise and distinct way, giving practical advice on what sort of questions to ask before deciding on the correct implementation and the kind of hybrid systems that could be used as well as covering best practices, common challenges and obstacles.

All in all this is a fantastic ebook providing five star food. It is also written well enough for those only recently joining the Knowledge Management environment to understand without getting bored and to come away with a better informed understanding of the use of both taxonomies and folksonomies in a corporate environment. If I were writing a book review, this would get five stars!

Friday 20 June 2008

Bookmark tags with Firefox 3

Well, apparently I am one of 8 million people who downloaded Firefox 3 on the first day of its release. I have to say that growing up in a corporate environment I have always tended towards Internet Explorer, but over the last five years or so I started playing around with Firefox. Initially I found it annoying as many websites were not fully supported in Firefox as they had been written for IE.

However things have changed. I no longer have this problem and I am becoming more familiar with some of the amazing add-ons that can be plugged in to Firefox. I now use Firefox as my default browser and whilst I do get a little frustrated when I try to open some links from e-mailed newsletters which turn out to be Word documents and hence for some reason do not appear to open properly, I am very happy with Firefox.

So I was quite excited when I found out there was a new release of Firefox. I don’t want to go in to all the details as I am certainly no expert. The one thing I did want to draw to attention was the bookmarking service in Firefox. It is a simple thing really, but when you now bookmark a page in Firefox, rather than just adding the page and organising it in your list of bookmarks you can actually tag the bookmark itself.
You can then search for bookmarks by tag or use the quick link to look at recently used tags. This adds greater flexibility to information retrieval and makes this retrieval more intelligent within the browser environment, rather than having a simple folder structure.

There are also plenty of bookmark add-ons already for Firefox which will hopefully make things even more useful. I haven’t had time to look at any of these yet, but if you want to have a look at what is available, click here. It would be great if Firefox could suggest tags for you to use in a similar way to Twine bookmarklets. Perhaps there is an add-on that allows that, but I haven’t found it yet. I’m sure I’ll write another post if I do find one though.
clipped from www.crn.com
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Firefox 3, the recently released open source browser from Mozilla, has claimed that over 8 million copies of the software were downloaded on Download Day. The company stated early that their goal was to surpass the initial release of Firefox 2, at 1.6 million downloads in 24 hours, and hit 5 million downloads


"We exceeded 8 million downloads in our 24 hour period," the blog states. Downloads were tracked from 11:16am PDT on June 17th to 11:16am PDT on the following day.

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Clipmarks and more on Twine

Below is an extract from an article from Hrafn Thorri Thorisson’s blog at Think Artifical about Twine. I thought I would add this as it gives a great description of bookmarklets, which adds to what I had already written. If you want to have a look at the full article, which covers the entire Twine service, click here.

In posting this extract I have tried using another new tool I came across called Clipmarks This plug in allows you to extract parts of a web page and then post them to your blog, add them to another web page or e-mail the extract to colleagues. It is an excellent tool for providing the right amount of information without having to send the entire link or article. With the tool you can extract videos and pictures as well as text.

It is very easy to use, however I have had a couple of issues in posting this article to my blog. Firstly I somehow managed to delete my comments whilst looking at the preview and in posting comments you can not use HTML, which is a shame as I initially had to add in URL’s for the above links rather than embed them in the text, which makes things a bit messy (this can be amended following the initial post of the blog in your standard blog editor). Also, once you get to the posting to blog page, there appears to be no way to adjust the information you have selected, you seem to have to start all over again if you change your mind on what should be posted.

Having said that, I still think this is a very useful tool and I am sure I will use it to e-mail colleagues parts of sites without having to add in the whole thing.

Bookmarklet Example

If you’ve ever used an online bookmarking service you’re familiar with adding a link to your browsers toolbar, and then clicking it to bookmark the page you’re on for easy access online later. It’s the same concept here, except when you click the bookmarking link the pretty window below appears at the corner of your browser window.

Twine Bookmarklet Example
The “Add to”, “Title” and “Summary” fields are shown truncated.
They auto-expand when clicked
None of the information you see above was entered by hand. The summary contains the text specified in the article metadata generated by Wordpress, the same regarding tags & title — plus Twine generates a thumbnail of the page.

So things are auto-extracted; with the option of adding or modifying them manually (you can manually select a pic from the page if you want). All we need to do is click save.


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