It’s funny how a simple concept ends up just exploding in a short amount of time and becomes the new craze. One example of this is “tagging.” Tagging was something I’ve wanted for years but never really thought of it as being something that everyone would be getting all excited over. However, now that a number of services are offering tagging support, I’m starting to see why.
For the uninformed, the concept of tagging is that you apply a word or two to a webpage, a photo, product, or whatever for later searching and for grouping. Instead of using some existing organizational structure, you create your own on the fly. The item you’re tagging can have multiple tags in it. Think of it like a magic filing cabinet, where you have photos, documents, and CDs. Some of the photos may be tagged “vacation,” some may be tagged “bbq,” all may be tagged “photo” and the “bbq” tagged items may also be tagged “work.” The documents may also be tagged “work” and the CDs may be tagged “games” and “recreation.” Now imagine that you want everything from your magic filing cabinet that has to do with work. You pull open the “work” drawer and all work-related photos, CDs and documents appear. You then decide to open the “vacation” drawer and everything vacation-related appears. Open “bbq” and you just get the BBQ photos. Those items may exist in multiple magical drawers at once. Okay, that’s a silly example, but hopefully it makes sense to some.
So I’ve been looking into what services support tagging. The two big ones I’ve heard about for ages but never really gave a shot have been del.icio.us, a bookmark site, and Flickr, a photo management site. I’ve been converting all my bookmarks to del.icio.us, and it’s really quite cool. I’ve all but stopped using bookmarks in my browser simply due to the lack of organization (do I put this in “algorithms” or “game design?”). However, now I have two buttons on my toolbar, one that takes me to my bookmarks, and another that posts the current page to my bookmarks. It’s very clean and very useful, and I just love it.
I’ve opted not to use Flickr, just because I’d rather host my own gallery, but the tag features in it are arguably even more useful for photos than for bookmarks. Rather than having to duplicate an image of my sister in a Vacations category, Birthdays, and People, I would be able to just tag that photo with those three things. This is a feature that I really hope Gallery gets in time.
Amazon recently announced that they are going to support tagging for items listed in their store. I’m curious as to how I’ll be making use of this, as it does seem a bit less useful for a site like this, but I’m sure I’m wrong 🙂 Either way, it’s very cool to see a big site like this start to experiment with tagging.
The big one that I only found out about today was Google. You can actually tag search results that you have clicked on and store them in Google-hosted bookmarks. To enable this, you’ll need a Google/GMail account. Log in on Google.com and then click “My Account.” From there, click “Personalized Search” on the left. You may have to log in again after this. Anyhow, it will then be added. From now on, your search results will have an extra item next to “Cached” and “Similar pages” called “Remove result.” Using this, you can prevent the particular page from ever showing up again.
Useful, but let’s get on to the main feature. Click the new “Search History” link at the top of the page. You’ll be taken to a page that contains a list of everything you’ve searched for since enabling this feature and the sites you’ve actually clicked on. If you star a result, it’ll appear in your bookmarks on the left. Click “Edit bookmark” and you’ll be able to set the tags for the link. Very handy. I just wish it integrated better into the Google search results. It’s a pain to have to first search for something in order to add it. But it’s new, and I haven’t seen any real buzz about it yet, so I’m sure it’ll mature in time.
Those are all very neat, but now we’ve ran into this problem of too many sites with tags. What I’m hoping to see (and maybe I’ll write it) is a site where you can log in, set up links to your Google, Flickr, del.icio.us, Amazon, etc. accounts, and aggregate all the tags. Click “vacation” and everything you’ve tagged “vacation” in each site you’ve set up will appear. This will of course require an API of some kind from each site. I know del.icio.us provides this, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see Google provide one, but I don’t know about the other two.
Now I should convert everything I’ve ever done to AJAX, because it’s just the new cool thing to do. 😉 (I kid, I kid)
This makes me think it would be useful if we had something like that in Nautilus. Of course we already have “Emblems”, but it would be cool if we had a category (“vfolder”) concept, where all your personal information is stored in one place (of which the user does not need to know about) and the files show up in the categories that the user wants to see.
Just have a look at F-spot. I wasn’t very found of it until I started taging my photos like a mad.
F-Spot is a great example, and I would have mentioned that but I decided to keep things in the context of web-related tagging. Definitely tagging files and photos on the desktop would be wonderful, and I would use it every day. It’d be nice to see more desktop apps start supporting this, especially in the area of searching.
A great non live radio using tagging (and having a BSD licenced player for linux) exists too : it is http://last.fm . When logged in, you can tag the music you like to listen and last.fm will try to stream you other tunes related to the same tag. Also, lastfm is affiliated with audioscrobbler !
http://last.fm/
http://www.audioscrobbler.net/
Something VERY useful with delicious is that you can create an rss feed from any combination of the tags. Combine this with firefox live bookmarks and you’ve got a traditional bookmark link that auto-updates whenever you add another entry with that tag. Very nifty.
Secondly, as a fellow wordpress user, I’d like to suggest the hashcash plugin (http://elliottback.com/wp/archives/2005/10/23/wordpress-hashcash-30-beta/ ), which I’ve used to 100% effectiveness without annoying captchas.
Take care.
Flickr does in fact provide an API to access photos of various tags.
Hello,
this is not related to this post, but more to the things happening
with GAIM. If you are interested I will be more then glad to
help you make and find additional team members to build up
a new multi-platform IM application.
I believe you can see the mail, altought
others can’t.
http://uckan.info/depot/monitorthis/ allows you to monitor tagged items from many different sites. It’ll give you RSS feeds that show newly-tagged items from those sites.