This link has been bookmarked by 100 people . It was first bookmarked on 31 Mar 2006, by Torsten Rox-Edling.
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avivajazz jazzavivaReal life data needs are never semantically pure. Users need to browse their data in different ways. Hierarchies are too hard to reorganize on a whim. Stuff I need access to DOES NOT HAPPEN TO EQUAL the stuff at the top of the tree: Hierarchies are bad a
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Jay DuggerYATR--Yet Another Thing to Read; Tag "del.icio.us--thantos" shows I copied this from that user.
del.icio.us folksonomy flickr papers reference tags tickler to-test
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Wytze KoopalBecause hierarchies has been the designated one size fits all solution to all our organizational needs, we break our semantically pure hierarchies by overstretching their bounds. As a result, we end up with messy hierarchies that are unusable and unmainta
tagging folksonomy tags classification socialsoftware taxonomy
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Ole Palnatoke AndersenHierarchy Versus Facets Versus Tags
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Karsten SchmidtThe problem of where to file: Is it possible to construct the perfect classification system?
tagging folksonomy rdf article readme movingbrands delicious
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Andrés SilvaThe problem of where to file: Is it possible to construct the perfect classification system?
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A truly first-rate hierarchy would not only have all of the characteristics of FN's hierarchy, but it would also manage to encode the hierarchy in such a way as to eliminate all ambiguity as to where an item might be found. FN comes pretty close. But you can always imagine that it might be hard to decide where that sock garter really goes? Bottoms? Legs? Ankles? Feet? It's also easy to imagine how that favorite pair of stretchy pants might do equally well @Home or @Gym.
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April DunfordHierarchies are too hard to set up and even harder to maintain... But why? Because real life data needs are never semantically pure.
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znarfor"The problem of where to file: Is it possible to construct the perfect classification system?"
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