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  • ms. froggie on Treasure, 7/22/2007 3:25:00 PM
  • aeneadellaluna on Treasure, 7/23/2007 1:22:00 AM
  • J. A. Bennett on Tagged!, 4/3/2012 8:09:00 AM
  • Linda Jackson on Tagged!, 4/3/2012 9:33:00 AM
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  • Rachna Chhabria on Tagged!, 4/3/2012 10:03:00 AM
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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: tagging, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. Tagged!

Before I get to some book reviews and interviews that have been on the back burner, It's "catch up" time for some tagging. In March I was tagged by two cool bloggers, Rachna Chhabria and Linda Jackson with The Lucky 7 Meme tag.  
Here's how tagging works 
(although some of you already know this):


1. Go to page 77 of your current MS, WIP.
2. Go to line 7.
3. Copy down the next 7 lines, sentences or paragraphs and 
post them as they are written.
4. Tag 7 authors.
5. Let them know.


Soooooo, here are my 7 sentences: (The car in question is a Model-T)


     All at once everything returned to me--Fathe

17 Comments on Tagged!, last added: 4/6/2012
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2. OSO, UPSO and XML

By Lenny Allen The title of the classic Philip K. Dick story asks whether androids dream of electric sheep. I don’t know the answer to that particular question, but I do know that we’re all–at this very moment, asleep or awake–dreaming of a digital monograph platform that is financially viable, intuitive, sustainable from the perspective of a rapidly shifting market environment, and adaptable enough to be able to meet both the short and long-term needs of scholarly research at all levels as well as the development of new business and acquisition models.

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3. Ebony and Ivory: Tagging and Taxonomies

I still have 21 single-spaced notes from IA Summit 2008. Two weeks ago I dreamed I was flying a small airplane low and slow across a gorgeous and ever-changing landscape new to me; beneath me spread cities, farms, rippling wheat fields, and rivers twisting and wrinkling in the distance. I think I’m in that airplane now, and the casualty may be some of my pre-flight blog posts don’t get written.

However, I wanted to return to tagging just long enough to talk about smarter tagging and also the very rich value of systems that combine taxonomies (such as LCSH) with folksonomies (tagging systems).

A number of us giggled helplessly through Gene Smith’s terrific presentation on tagging at IA Summit. The speaker kindly ignored us, though he may have wondered what the joke was. Here were some of the suggestions for improving tagging:

  • More structure and control
  • The ability to subdivide tags
  • Providing tag definitions
  • Offering tag suggestions (such as the way delicious prompts you with tags)
  • Allowing true phrases (such as the ability to write creative nonfiction as a phrase, which I can do in LibraryThing, rather than cram it together as creativenonfiction, as I must in delicious)

If you’re a librarian and you’re reading this, you’re grinning. Isn’t it amazing how if you give people enough tools and time, they eventually reinvent cataloging?

However, it’s also telling when people reinvent something that already exists. While traditional cataloging (let’s call this taxonomy work) has all of these characteristics and then some, it’s also slow, in part because it puts the emphasis on “structure and control.” Taxonomies are “expert” systems limited in application to a handful of skilled practitioners. Taxonomies are the long, slow, deliberative output of people thinking at high levels about ontologies (or they should be, but that’s another post).

Slow isn’t bad, as long as it’s not the only descriptive method available. However, if you’ve ever attempted to search a library catalog for an emerging topic, you know slow has its limits. Imagine waiting around for catalogers to decide what tags we would be “allowed” to use in delicious, LibraryThing, or Flickr.

This brings us to pace layering, discussions in the wild for which I can easily trace back to IA Summit 2003. The concept also gets an excellent workout in Peter Morville’s Ambient Findability.

The information-architect folk are very familiar with “pace layering”; it’s newer or unknown to many librarians. In a nutshell, as Morville describes it (a theory adapted from Stewart Brand’s books), “buildings, and society as a whole, are constructs of several layers.. each with a unique and suitable rate of change. … The slow layers provide stability. The fast layers drive innovation.” Together, tagging and taxonomies form a healthy complement, building a “hybrid metadata ecology.”

It really is all good. However, we as librarians should carefully avoid remaking tagging in cataloging’s image — slowing it down to the pace of taxonomies by making tagging too rigid, vetted, and structured. I’m in favor of all those capabilities described at IA Summit, but only insofar as we do not (ab)use them in a manner that trips up the fast front end of folksonomy-building.

I also disagree with (or simply want to broaden) some of the conclusions about motivations for tagging presented in the comments on my earlier post about tagging.

Librarians (and other taxonomists) tagging content for others to use occupy a fascinating and important middle ground — striding quickly, perhaps, between the jog of the folksonomists and the wedding-march of the taxonomists. (Think of three people-movers; librarians tagging for others are on the middle stretch.) We can be proud of the work we do in this space, and it really deserves closer attention.

I repeatedly use the Assumption College delicious set in my presentations because it is a superb example of skilled taxonomists leveraging the tagging wilderness. Sometimes they re-use taxonomy terms and sometimes they do not; you can also see taxonomists thinking around some of the limitations of delicious, such as the inability to recognize strings of words, or exploiting its strengths, such as the ability to group terms into sets. It’s this kind of innovative thinking — applying a taxonomist’s knowledge to a tagging framework — and this kind of behavior — tagging for your users — that tells me librarianship has a real future.

I could write more — perhaps I will — but it’s time to get back into my airplane and resume cruising speed!

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4. Links to Presentations

It’s been a crazy couple of weeks, but I’ve had the pleasure of giving a flurry of presentations that I promised attendees I’d link to from here. I love that the Illinois educators I spoke to at the end of February were just as enthusiastic as the Dutch librarians who attended my presentations in the Netherlands. Thank you to everyone who came to them all and helped make this a very special time for me.

I’m still uploading pictures from the Netherlands trip on Flickr, but I will definitely post about the amazing Delft and Amsterdam libraries I had the great fortune to visit (special Flickr sets to appear online soon).

, , , , , ,

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5. Treasure



I took the word treasure into a deeper level then just " my precious" .. if you know what I mean.. Both of these I made in 99....i was sixteen then.. the first one I posted represents the wind/ocean swirl treasuring a ship for herself..like a little toy.. she balances it and plays with it..kinda like a floating ducky on the bathtub..
The second one..I'll let your mind wonder..

2 Comments on Treasure, last added: 7/23/2007
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