Category Archives: tagging

MagNet Presentation on Research Using the Web

 View Post
Posted in Bibme, Canadian Copyright, communication, delicious, education, howto, indexing, organizing_information, PowerPoint, research, RSS, Search, SlideShare, social_bookmarking, tagging, tips, Twitter, web2.0, webtools, Wikipedia, Zotero | Tagged , , | Comments Off

Why I Use More than One Social Bookmarking Service

Not that I’m paranoid (or maybe I am but I like to call it cautious skepticism) but I am always aware than any of the free web services that I use, or even ones I’ve paid for, could go belly up and my stuff on it (them) could vanish into a black hole. So when View Post

 View Post
Posted in backup, bookmark, delicious, howto, Internet_use, learning, organizing_information, PLE, references, research, share, social_bookmarking, tagging, tips, webtools | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off

Social Bookmarking – Diigo

Social bookmarking is one of the most useful aspects of the web. You can use it to create your own online library, organized to your own interests by using tags. Although I’ve been using some form of social bookmarking for years, every so often I want to review what I can do with the social View Post

 View Post
Posted in blogging, bookmark, delicious, e-learning, howto, references, research, Search, share, socialmedia, social_bookmarking, tagging, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off

MagNet Presentation on Researching Using the Web

I’ve noticed that when I speak, I have my deepest focus on what I’m saying and trying to communicate, but that I pay substantial subsidiary attention to the audience’s reaction. If they don’t respond, it doesn’t matter how good my material is and my intentions are, I feel like I’m tanking. So, yesterday, when I View Post

 View Post
Posted in Bibme, Canadian Copyright, delicious, indexing, labeling, organizing_information, PowerPoint, references, research, RSS, share, SlideShare, social_bookmarking, social_web, tagging, tips, web2.0, webtools, Wikipedia, Zotero | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off

MagNet '09

I GO-trained into Toronto today to attend some sessions  at the MagNet ’09 Conference. I was really impressed with the excellent level of organization and with the high quality of the two sessions I attended, a session with a panel of literary agents answering questions and a session with Harry van Bommel on self-publishing. Both View Post

 View Post
Posted in communication, PowerPoint, research, Search, Skitch, social_bookmarking, tagging, tips, webtools, Zotero | Tagged , , , | Comments Off

Personalizing Web Access

Sometimes a bunch of experiences mash together and inspiration results. A couple of day ago I received a comment on one of my posts – #2 by Virginia Yonkers where she said “Try working on another’s computer! Just as we have idiosyncrasies in the speech, how we do math, writing (think of handwriting), we develop View Post

 View Post
Posted in business, computers, delicious, Internet_use, learning, learning 2.0, Mac, organizing_information, PLE, PLWE, social_bookmarking, tagging, technology, tips, web2.0, webtools | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off

Tagging – For Organizing Information

One of the most important aspects of the web today is a way of organizing information called tagging (or, on Blogger, labelling). You could say that tagging is the child of alphabetical indexing – a post-Gutenberg information management invention – and hyperlinking – a web networking development. You can see what this looks like in View Post

 View Post
Posted in blogging, delicious, folksonomy, indexing, labeling, organizing_information, printing, social_bookmarking, tagging, teaching writing, web2.0 | Comments Off

A Quick History of our New Digital Environment

This is about our communication tools and how they are changing. It’s short and fast. You might want to watch it more than once, if you’re not a digital native. I needed to watch it more than once;-> Subscribe

 View Post
Posted in bookmark, hypertext, mash, RSS, social_web, tagging, text, video, web2.0 | Comments Off