Monday, January 15, 2007

Is there a need for a tagging standard?

For those interested in folksonomy ... from Slashdot. Is this the same as professional indexing? Are we re-inventing the wheel again?

John Carmichael writes "Tags are everywhere now. Not just blogs, but famous news sites, corporate press bulletins, forums, and even Slashdot. That's why it's such a shame that they're rendered almost entirely useless by the lack of a tagging standard with which tags from various sites and tag aggregators like Technorati and Del.icio.us can compare and relate tags to one another. Depending on where you go and who you ask, tags are implemented differently, and even defined in their own unique way. Even more importantly, tags were meant to be universal and compatible: a medium of sharing and conveying info across the blogosphere — the very embodiment of a semantic web. Unfortunately, they're not. Far from it, tags create more discord and confusion than they do minimize it. I have to say, it would be nice to just learn one way of tagging content and using it everywhere.""

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

There are tools you can use to "tag" your files and folders. This one from "nudgenudge" :-) works on a MAC and claims to "help you cope with the day-to-day struggle of managing your files....it allows you to tag your files and bookmarks, freeing you of the strict hierarchy of the Finder's folder structure."