This link has been bookmarked by 26 people . It was first bookmarked on 05 Jul 2007, by Lainie (McGann) Rowell.
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04 Jun 14
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Diigo (Digest of Internet Information, Groups, and Other Stuff). By creating a Diigo account, you can visit Web sites and mark them up by tagging sticky notes on the page with a simple drag-and-drop procedure. Imagine being able to place a tag on an image, a specific line of a poem, or a statistic on a page of data.
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05 Jul 11
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28 Jun 11
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20 Feb 11
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28 Nov 10
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14 Jul 10
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Diigo definitely has a place in education. Envision a group of students working on a Web-based research project: Not only can they cite the pages they’ve used, they can also have conversations about resources on the very pages they are discussing. And to take it a step further, the students’ teacher can join the group, view how the students are using the Web resources, and comment on their note-taking -- right on the sticky notes. As the site states, “Diigo is about Social Annotation.”
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10 Feb 10
Mariette Baker-McDermid"Diigo is pronounced "dee'go" and it's an abbreviation for "Digest of Internet Information, Groups and Other stuff." Founded by Dr. Ren, previously a EECS professor at UC Berkeley, Diigo arose out of personal needs to read and digest large amount of information online and the need to share thoughts and interact on those information."
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19 Oct 09
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28 Sep 09
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06 Jul 09
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12 Aug 08
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31 Dec 07
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04 Nov 07
Sylvia RiessnerLainiemcgann's Bookmarks tagged social bookmarking - she taught a workshop in social bookmarking using Diigo
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08 Aug 07
Jennifer LubkePronounced "dee-go," this tool enables you to mark a web site by tagging sticky notes on the page with a simple drag-and-drop procedure. (from Edutopia, article includes link to the Diigo home page as well as ideas for classroom application)
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05 Aug 07
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Diigo definitely has a place in education. Envision a group of students working on a Web-based research project: Not only can they cite the pages they’ve used, they can also have conversations about resources on the very pages they are discussing. And to take it a step further, the students’ teacher can join the group, view how the students are using the Web resources, and comment on their note-taking -- right on the sticky notes. As the site states, “Diigo is about Social Annotation.”
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02 Aug 07
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05 Jul 07
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02 Jul 07
Fred KochBy creating a Diigo account, you can visit Web sites and mark them up by tagging sticky notes on the page with a simple drag-and-drop procedure. Imagine being able to place a tag on an image, a specific line of a poem, or a statistic on a page of data. Fr
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Daniel CraigBrief write up on the potentials of Web annotation services. This one, in particular, is called Diigo. Yet another way to organize/make sense of the piles of information on the Web.
annotation web2.0 socialbookmarking CALL iucall danielcraig socialannotation article teaching education
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