This link has been bookmarked by 70 people . It was first bookmarked on 26 Mar 2007, by Mario A Núñez.
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02 Dec 10
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29 Jul 09
CNDLS GeorgetownBlog post on using delicious for academic research and teaching
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09 Jun 09
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01 May 09
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08 Mar 09
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07 Mar 09
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04 Mar 09
makeller63Delicious is the Rome, Jerusalem, and Paris of my existence as an academic these days. It's where I make my friends, how I get the news, and where I go to trade. All this from a little server that does nothing but share bookmarks in public.
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22 Feb 09
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05 Jan 09
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01 Jan 09
arne krokanDelicious is the Rome, Jerusalem, and Paris of my existence as an academic these days. It's where I make my friends, how I get the news, and where I go to trade. All this from a little server that does nothing but share bookmarks in public.
Why? Two reas -
31 Dec 08
Howard RheingoldDelicious is the Rome, Jerusalem, and Paris of my existence as an academic these days. It's where I make my friends, how I get the news, and where I go to trade. All this from a little server that does nothing but share bookmarks in public.
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08 Dec 08
Silvana Gregoriohow an academic uses Del.icio.us for research and teaching
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07 Dec 08
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18 Nov 08
Manuela WagnerA 2007 blog post by Jo Guldi, a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in Digital History at the University of Chicago.
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Delicious is the Rome, Jerusalem, and Paris of my existence as an academic these days. It's where I make my friends, how I get the news, and where I go to trade. All this from a little server that does nothing but share bookmarks in public.
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I've been building a taxonomy -- the way some people use wikis, the way my boyfriend uses that utterly cool personal software, "the brain
;" the way my father uses his vertical file, the way my DC friends use their rolodexes -- so I sort out all the information I take in, annexing technology to memory, sorting factoids and spare threads and notable evidence in neat, interlocking piles where I can find information again, draw connections, and create new connections. -
The forty American history students I teach are instructed to go to my delicious page for writing help
, research help
, maps
, and images
relating to the class. -
What's rapidly happening with these shared tags is academics finding each other in rapid numbers. I have some twenty people in my network, at least half of whom I've never met in real life.
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Every morning, I log into my delicious network
and read the links that my small army of admired, clever, canny, eccentric brains has put together for me.
What's more, I'm developing what I'd consider an actual working relationship with these other scholars. A few of them have added me to their own networks. Day to day, I watch their reactions to Bush, I get a sense of where their research is going, and they get a sense of mine. It's low-level, low-commitment hanging out with high levels of information exchange. -
As Hannah Arendt understood, the modern democratic state happened when people in public spaces began interacting, and thus began taking action together. For this reason, she identified the medival carnivals and fair days of Europe as the seat of literature, culture, debate, and politics. The rule goes like this: make a public, get action. Today, Delicious does for the internet what open-air markets did for medieval society. Low key, high-information, continuous-formation community building.
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16 Nov 08
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Barbara LindseyA 2007 blog post by Jo Guldi, a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in Digital History at the University of Chicago.
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Delicious is the Rome, Jerusalem, and Paris of my existence as an academic these days. It's where I make my friends, how I get the news, and where I go to trade. All this from a little server that does nothing but share bookmarks in public.
-
I've been building a taxonomy -- the way some people use wikis, the way my boyfriend uses that utterly cool personal software, "the brain
;" the way my father uses his vertical file, the way my DC friends use their rolodexes -- so I sort out all the information I take in, annexing technology to memory, sorting factoids and spare threads and notable evidence in neat, interlocking piles where I can find information again, draw connections, and create new connections. -
The forty American history students I teach are instructed to go to my delicious page for writing help
, research help
, maps
, and images
relating to the class. -
What's rapidly happening with these shared tags is academics finding each other in rapid numbers. I have some twenty people in my network, at least half of whom I've never met in real life.
-
Every morning, I log into my delicious network
and read the links that my small army of admired, clever, canny, eccentric brains has put together for me.
What's more, I'm developing what I'd consider an actual working relationship with these other scholars. A few of them have added me to their own networks. Day to day, I watch their reactions to Bush, I get a sense of where their research is going, and they get a sense of mine. It's low-level, low-commitment hanging out with high levels of information exchange. -
As Hannah Arendt understood, the modern democratic state happened when people in public spaces began interacting, and thus began taking action together. For this reason, she identified the medival carnivals and fair days of Europe as the seat of literature, culture, debate, and politics. The rule goes like this: make a public, get action. Today, Delicious does for the internet what open-air markets did for medieval society. Low key, high-information, continuous-formation community building.
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14 Nov 08
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06 Oct 08
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10 Aug 08
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19 Jun 08
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16 Jun 08
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10 Jun 08
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08 Jun 08
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05 May 08
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04 May 08
Cameron Neylonnice blog post articulating community and collaboration concepts and the potential for social tagging in collaboration building. Particularly good on the necssity for public tagging.
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23 Mar 08
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18 Mar 08
Vincent Sterkeninsightful piece on research through bookmarking
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16 Mar 08
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15 Mar 08
Suvi KorhonenDelicious is the Rome, Jerusalem, and Paris of my existence as an academic these days. It's where I make my friends, how I get the news, and where I go to trade. All this from a little server that does nothing but share bookmarks in public.
del.icio.us research academic delicious social bookmarking academia reference blogging academicresearch web2.0 university tools software for:marikoo for:mace for:marylkayoe for:matrixx2.01 for:matnel for:lindaliukas for:jjmajava for:tuija for:qtea for:sem
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14 Mar 08
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13 Mar 08
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Ratcatcher"Today, Delicious does for the internet what open-air markets did for medieval society. Low key, high-information, continuous-formation community building. All hail the bookmark market"
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06 Mar 08
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05 Mar 08
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02 Dec 07
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01 Dec 07
Michel BauwensDelicious is the Rome, Jerusalem, and Paris of my existence as an academic these days.
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29 Nov 07
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18 Apr 07
Adam CroweGreat insights on taggers: "I'm developing what I'd consider an actual working relationship with these other scholars. A few of them have added me to their own networks. It's low-level, low-commitment hanging out with high levels of information exchange."
bookmarking tagging tags taggers research del.icio.us metadata collectiveintelligence crowdsourcing sharing academia
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03 Apr 07
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02 Apr 07
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27 Mar 07
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26 Mar 07
Martin LindnerDelicious is the Rome, Jerusalem, and Paris of my existence as an academic these days.
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Heinz Wittenbrink"Today, Delicious does for the internet what open-air markets did for medieval society. Low key, high-information, continuous-formation community building."
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