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InfoSpaces » Facetag and the ASIST Bulletin

Tag: tagging

Facetag and the ASIST Bulletin

Monday, June 11th, 2007

I’m honored to let you know that our article about faceted tags and Facetag has been requested to be part of the June-July number of the Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology.

The Bulletin is a bi-monthly magazine packed with developments and issues affecting the field, pragmatic management reports, opinion, and news […]

Social media is respecting your customers

Thursday, April 19th, 2007

I loved Rawsugar. I helped them improving bringing in my two cents and I came to knew Frank Smadja, a very smart guy and VP of Rawsugar.

The site has been sold and while users were said data would have been kept safe for the time to come it seems I lost all my bookmarks. I […]

Facetag Slides

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007

As I promised, here it is our deck:

Comments welcome.

You can find the new paper, navigation videos and other papers at Facetag.org. The new completely recoded ajaxy and web2.0ish application will be made available in the coming weeks.

Talking at the IA Summit 2007

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

Quick post to say that today I’m gonna talk at the IA Summit in Las Vegas. IA Summit is the biggest conference for information architects (800 visitors for three main tracks + a flexible one). I’ll present the new developments and preliminary findings of FaceTag but this time to a really international and expert […]

When tags work and when they don’t

Saturday, February 24th, 2007

I’ve talked before about LibraryThing as one of the best examples of advanced use of tagging tecniques.

LibraryThing (11M of books) lets users catalogue and tag books. Subject headings are shown side by side with people assigned tags. You can browse using a top down approach or fly horizontally leveraging tags. A bonus is the possibility […]

WWW 2007 Tagging Workshop

Monday, January 8th, 2007

I’m proud of being among the bold knights that will compose the committee of the wonderful Tagging Workshop part of the WWW2007 this year in Banff, Canada.

The WWW2007 is the “annual gathering place of the international community to discuss and debate the future evolution of the Web” currently at its 16th edition.

The Tagging Workshop at […]

Facetag accepted for the IA Summit

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

To be sincere I’m really surprised. I couldn’t believe it and I’m very very excited: Facetag has been accepted as a research paper for the international IA Summit to be held in March in Las Vegas.

Facetag was presented already at the EuroIA and at the SWAP this year, but the IA Summit is a mondial […]

Folksonomies are dead. Long life to folksonomies

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

Analysts (but also experts) make their money giving predictions, insights, forecasts.

Gartner, for example, yearly publishes a Hype Cycle for Emergent Technologies and a Hype cycle for Web Applications. I sincerely like this work, because it can help you to build a bigger picture about all the new things that come around during the year […]

Video Sharing Sites Spreading in Italy

Friday, December 22nd, 2006

While Italy remains among the worst countries in the european web penetration chart (19,8 milion users), Nielsen//NetRatings recently noticed how italians are heavy internet users with 17hours spent online each month (+32% in the last year) thanks to the increasing adoption of flat broadband lines. The neat effect is that the web is starting to […]

Facetag Slides and Paper

Monday, October 23rd, 2006

As I wrote in my preliminary post about FaceTag, this project is actually quite unique in its kind.

I think about it as a sort of bridge between emergent and traditional classification tools. A mixed sauce that aims to smoothen both the limits of controlled vocabularies and of plain folksonomies.

The feedback that we got at […]

Joining Research and Practice: Social Computing and Information Science

Thursday, October 19th, 2006

2007 seems to be an extraordinary year for the education on social tagging and web 2.0 applications more generally.

Joining Research and Practice: Social Computing and Information Science will probably be among the richest conferences and will be held October 18-25, in (Milwaukee, Wisconsin) as a part of the ASIS&T Annual Meeting.

The deep change that is […]

Bye Bye Accenture

Friday, September 15th, 2006

After two years and a half, this is my last day in Accenture. Among my competencies here, defining the strategy and evangelizing about customer experience and its value for our clients with consulting and operational roles on a number of web related projects (you know gathering requirements, working on the information architecture and interaction design, […]

TAGora Project: Semiotic Dynamics in Online Social Communities

Monday, June 26th, 2006

Today, Vittorio Loreto (PIL Group, Physics Department of La Sapienza University) invited me to partecipate to the kick-off meeting of an innovative research project funded by the European Commission in the framework of the FET proactive initiative Simulating Emergent Properties in Complex Systems.

The TAGora project aims to leverage online social systems to […]

Why people tag

Wednesday, May 3rd, 2006

Lately, every and each day, a new folksonomical web 2.0 startup seems to born. Going a step further and trying to catch their mission, their added value, the innovation they introduce very often you will find nothing new!

As if Web 2.0 was a goal in itself: creating a new service inspired to the widespread new […]

Tagging is not going to pass

Monday, May 1st, 2006

David Sifry gives us an update on the blogosphere status seen from Technorati.com:

Over 35.3 37.3 Million blogs
The blogosphere is doubling every 6 months
Its size is 60 times bigger than 3 years ago
A new weblog every second
19.4 million bloggers (55%) still active after 3 months

As you may expect, the blogosphere is still growing at an incredible […]

Tagging Clustering vs Facets

Monday, April 24th, 2006

Lately I’m really focused on the evolution of tagging. To find the new way you have to know the old path.. so I’m frequently coming back to faceted classification and Ranganathan’s ideas.

To add a structure on tags, a few different approaches seem to be viable. Clustering is among the most famous now.

On this topic, Marti […]

Folksonomies: a Web 2.0 lesson learned

Tuesday, April 4th, 2006

Web 2.0 Introduction
When the dot com bubble burst in the fall of 2001, the Web as we knew it went through a dramatic change. The idealistic, overenthusiastic and highly dynamic vision of the Internet pioneers suddenly imploded, leaving room for a period of rational pragmatism, refinement and reflection in which costs and value maximization gained […]

The next tag cloud

Sunday, April 2nd, 2006

I’m not sure that all tagging problems are limited to visualization issues in current tag clouds. My opinion is that we lack that fundamental structure that has been lost reaching a flat set of keywords. Yes, this approach allowed that wild tagging adoption, but now it’s time to reintroduce a little of structure.

Anyway a few […]

Tags Need Evolution

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

I’m again and again thinking about how tagging, as we know it now, is not working. It simply cannot scale and it cannot be really applied to contexts in which finding or keeping things found is fundamental.

A post that I read casually from Volkan Ozcelik impressed me a lot:

In need of organizing my tags

I have […]

The Evolution of Social Tagging

Thursday, March 30th, 2006

Since a few people asked me about that, here is the link to the ppt deck from the italian IA Summit.

I gave a talk about the evolution of the social tagging introducing my ideas about the future of folksonomies:

Faceted Tagging (Mefeedia) Editors create mutually exclusive facets and users assign tags to facets
Advanced Navigation Iterative […]

Improving Social Bookmarking Granularity

Tuesday, March 21st, 2006

Lately I’m playing badly with RawSugar, a powerful web2.0 social bookmarking platform that, starting from a delicious like idea, adds a bit of secret sauce and of hierarchical tagging.

I’m really curious about hierarchical tagging, especially to understand to which extent people are intestered in using it.

An idea that could also be of interested for me […]

IA Summit 2006

Tuesday, March 7th, 2006

After having managed the first Italian IA Summit, I’m preparing to head to Vancouver for the IA Summit 2006. I will be there from March, 22th to March, 28th (back in Italy the day after).

I will have a free day and I will follow Peter Morville’s Information Architecture & Findability.

For the real conference, I […]

Folksonomies 2.0 - Links

Thursday, March 2nd, 2006

With the desire of continuing the discussion about the evolution of tagging, I’m going to post a few links about comments on my previous Folksonomies 2.0 - The chaotic order:

Wikisomies - David Weinberg
Folksonomies 2.0 - M@moo
Faceted Tags - Beyond Folksonomies
Folksonomy 2.0 - kurai
Are folksonomies scalable? - Tara Hunt

I invite you to give […]

Folksonomies 2.0 - The Chaotic Order

Friday, February 17th, 2006

I have a tags related idea that periodically comes back to my mind. Yesterday I had a chat with Peter Van Dijck about it.

Folksonomies are a very widespread concept today and also a few big magazines have understood their revolutionary approach and value.

What I’m asking to myself is: “Since a year ago, which evolution […]

Folksonomies and Librarians

Saturday, September 17th, 2005

I’d like to link a curious (at least for me) folksonomy review “Folksonomies fascinate me” by a librarian perspective. Some of the points:

Folksonomies fascinate me, in no small part because they are a direct response to a failing of our profession which has irritated me since library school days..

When embarking on a piece of analysis, […]

Folksonomies - Power To The Folk

Monday, June 13th, 2005

My overview paper on folksonomies is ready. I’ve the honour to publish it for the italian chapter of the ISKO (International Society for Knowledge Organization). An official presentation will follow at the ISKO Italy-UniMIB meeting : Milan : June 24, 2005.

Some of the topics covered: a story of folksonomies, their properties, the differences with […]

Technorati In Beta

Sunday, June 12th, 2005

From Antonella Pastore on HyperGuru some observations about the redesign of Technorati, currently in beta.

The improvements are related to:

a better user experience
increased tag based functionalities
increased usage of Rss feeds

The graphical interface benefits from a tabbed approach and Dhtml use for the search. The content is more structured and everything can be found in the right […]

Social Search = Tags + Search

Tuesday, May 10th, 2005

Lately we’ve seen a lot of discussion about the role of folksonomies, search engines and traditional classifications. The conclusion seemed to be that folksonomies suggest a serendipity approach to information retrieval, while taxonomies and search engines (in two different ways) are more useful for a targeted, specific search.

But the question is:
Search engines and tagging […]

The first post on folksonomies

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

Probably the first post about folksonomies, long before the term was coined and social softwares like del.icio.us and flickr saw the light, was written by Peter Merholz and is dated 11/10/2001!

In a post titled Vernacular Thesauri, Peter talked about user generated classification after attending to ASIST 2001.

Her talk got me thinking about community-generated, or “vernacular” […]

Metadata for the Masses

Wednesday, April 27th, 2005

I’m actually preparing an article to summarize the online material about folksonomies and social/free tagging.

Looking on the site of Adaptive Path I’ve found a simply essay on the topic:

Metadata for the Masses from Peter Merholz

It’s nice to notice the date of the article: October 19, 2004. At that time folksonomies we’re still not very […]

Folksonomies require tagging?

Monday, March 14th, 2005

Again from Joshua Porter an enlightning post entitled I’ve Heard of Folksonomies. Now How do I Apply them to My Site?.

The title is a little misleading in my opionion, but the meaning very very clear and the narration always precise.

Joshua is reflecting about the real power of folksonomies that does not necessarily concerns the tagging […]