
Diigo is a Bookmarking, Annotation and Social Networking site that has got me all excited. I think I am in love.
I first tried Diigo when it came out in 2006 but it did not turn my eye; it was a touch too young and inexperienced then. Diigo 3 was launched 20th March 2008, showing a new maturity. After seeing its attractive new features I have been unfaithful to Delicious, my bookmarking partner of 5 years, and fallen in love with the younger and more versatile diigo.
I have always stayed with Delicious, despite its lack of sparkling design and social networking features, because it allowed me to organize my bookmarks well. I used it as a resource for research and referral purposes.
What I like about diigo
- Bookmarking
- As well as bookmarking and tagging:- Create lists to add specific bookmarks to and produce interactive web slides from these.
- Importing of bookmarks from your browser and other bookmarking sites is easy to do.
- You are able to automatically add bookmarks to Delicious and other bookmarking sites too. I am two timing for now. If you do not want to automatically duplicate bookmarks you can do it manually via the “publish” button next to the diigo bookmark.
- An RSS feed is available for your bookmarks and your lists.
- A widget can be created to display items on your blog - as you can see in my sidebar.
- Tag communities show you bookmarks by tag and the members who have used that tag.

- . Diigo allows you to annotate web pages.
- You can highlight areas you find of interest and add sticky notes, (or highlight just to add the text as a description of your bookmark). The highlights remain when you return to a page, which makes it easy to find the areas that you were interested in.
- If a page has changed since your last visit you can view a cached version with your annotations in place.
- Social Networking is possible via adding friends and joining groups. Knowledge sharing is one of the main aims of the site.
- You can find friends by searching your email addresses for existing diigo users or inviting those who are not yet members.
- You can browse for those who share similar interests, search for those you know and see who is currently online.
- Invite members to groups you belong to.

Groups allow you to find those who share your interests. (When bookmarking you can choose to share it with a group, with your friends and add to a list.) Voting for a group bookmark via a thumbs up raises its profile - the idea is that the more popular better content becomes easier to find.
- Search by tags is possible and you can set up watch lists for specific tags.
- Diigo lets you see everyone who has bookmarked your site and what they saved - a handy tool to research what is popular on your blog.

Diigo operates via a browser extension which installs a toolbar with options for interacting with diigo and a sidebar showing your bookmarks. I am impressed by their features.
The Toolbar

The toolbar allows you to:
- Highlight parts of a page for future visits.
- Add sticky notes to the highlighted areas.
- If you have selected text before bookmarking, this is added to the bookmark’s description.
- Bookmark it to diigo (and to your browser favorites and other social networking sites).
- Add comments relating to the page you are on.
- Send the page to your diigo friends, to your blog, twitter or Facebook.
- Send messages and receive message alerts.
Sidebar
The sidebar is split into 3 tabs:
The URL tab:
- Shows you other members who have bookmarked the page you are on.
- Displays annotations that have been added to the page by yourself and or others.
- Allows you to leave a comment via the sidebar which will be visible to all diigo users who visit the page.

The Bookmarks Tab
- Shows your bookmarks, tags or lists:

The Friends Tab
- Lists your friends and allows you to message them via email or diigo messaging system. My mate Colin has found me but I have not yet found anyone else I know on there. My profile name is Sue Blimely hint hint.

Diigo’s interface is well designed and I found it easy to find my way around its features right from the start.
I suspect Delicious and I may separate but still remain friends. After all I am still throwing bookmarks its way and will visit from time to time to add any new tags to the right categories.
I really hope diigo becomes extremely popular as I would happily use the site as my main social networking venue if more of my friends and contacts were to join.
As usual I am a little late with the news of the new diigo because I had to give it a good work out before I reported on it. I have spent hours playing with it, uploading my bookmarks from Delicious, creating lists, annotating, adding sticky notes, joining groups ….
I created a list specifically for my own blog posts and one for diigo. This link takes you to all the posts and diigo tutorials I have bookmarked for you to browse through and learn more. A snippet of these is displayed in the tag roll widget to the right.
Thanks to Phil Butler whose article alerted me to the diigo changes and motivated me to go and take another look. He says “Diigo has refined a social annotation and collaboration service into an even more effective “personal and group oriented tool” - which is how I would have defined it if I could have thought up something so concise and meaningful!
I am off to be sociable now - join some diigo groups and find me some friends. I hope to see you there.
Popularity: 12% [?]









Hi Sue,
I’ve joined - please feel free to friend me as facibus.
Best regards, Andrew
Andrew Boyd’s last blog post..WordPress 2.5: Broken under OSX
[...] In Love with diigo Farewell del.icio.us Annotated [...]
Nice to see your comments about Diigo. I love it as well. Just to let you knpow that Diigo also has a widget which you can add your site which allows Diigo users to add you to their bookmarks with just a click. Nice way to advertise the service.
I am so behind in the times!
I am yet to use a social bookmarking site!!! Well I think so anyway?!?
Lulu’s last blog post..M is for Mother?
A fine, informative post! Thank you. I’ll have to check into it!
Lynda Lehmann’s last blog post..Light Through Time
As a delicious addict whose tried other social bookmarking sites and still come back to delicious, I nearly quit on your post until you wrote about automatically posting to both diigo and delicious. Glad I kept reading because diigo looks quite interesting. I’m off to give it a shot myself, thanks!
Adam Pieniazek’s last blog post..Links for 2008-04-04 [del.icio.us]
Nice to see you gave diigo a try and enjoyed it, Sue. I was sure you’d grow to love it. Now I discovered a new one, not as awesome yet, but I have faith.
Are you familiar with Second Brain? It is not bookmarking only - it allows you to collect all your content in one place. If you have more blogs you can import them, categorize them and so on.
Mig’s last blog post..Crap versus Quality at Techcrunch
Being able to still post to delicious was the icing on the cake for me too but now I am using diigo I think it surpasses delicious.
Thanks Sue
Having signed up, I will have to work out how to use it effectively.
Well written and informative as usual.
Colin Campbell’s last blog post..Twiggy No Thanks
Thanks Colin, good to see you here
Your post makes one think! Great article. Thanks for allowing me to comment!
[...] is the group thread that alerted me to the thumbs feature. Here is another article about Diigo were thumbs are [...]
Thank you for the information! I still have to learn how to use them, though… Checking it out now…
As a delicious addict whose tried other social bookmarking sites and still come back to delicious, I nearly quit on your post until you wrote about automatically posting to both diigo and delicious
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