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Tag2find

File Name Tag Explorer File Name Tag Explorer lets you: Organize your files with tags.Search or Browser files with tag filter. Find files which match all or any selected tagsDO NOT need to spend any time editing tag information for files. File Name Tag Explorer can automatically extract tags from files' name. File Name Tag Explorer is a FREEWARE. Who Needs File Name Tag Explorer? Tried to maintain a tagged file system to organized your media files, reference articles, or other types of files.Wanted a tagged file system but do not want to spend much time on editing tag information.Collected a lot of reference articles or e-books and want to search or browse them in more efficient way. What is a tag? A tag is a non-hierarchical keyword or term assigned to a piece of information (such as an internet bookmark, digital image, or computer file). What's the problem with other file tagging software? There are some file tagging software you can find on internet. Why use File Name Tag Explorer?

You’re It! O'Reilly -- What Is Web 2.0 by Tim O'Reilly 09/30/2005 Oct. 2009: Tim O'Reilly and John Battelle answer the question of "What's next for Web 2.0?" in Web Squared: Web 2.0 Five Years On. The bursting of the dot-com bubble in the fall of 2001 marked a turning point for the web. The concept of "Web 2.0" began with a conference brainstorming session between O'Reilly and MediaLive International. In the year and a half since, the term "Web 2.0" has clearly taken hold, with more than 9.5 million citations in Google. This article is an attempt to clarify just what we mean by Web 2.0. In our initial brainstorming, we formulated our sense of Web 2.0 by example: The list went on and on. 1. Like many important concepts, Web 2.0 doesn't have a hard boundary, but rather, a gravitational core. Figure 1 shows a "meme map" of Web 2.0 that was developed at a brainstorming session during FOO Camp, a conference at O'Reilly Media. Netscape vs. At bottom, Google requires a competency that Netscape never needed: database management.

Knowledge Jolt with Jack: ASIST on folksonomies and tagging The Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology has a special section on Folksonomies in the October / November 2007 issue. It contains the following articles: Introduction: Folksonomies and Image Tagging: Seeing the Future? by Diane Neal, Guest EditorDoes a nice job of providing an overview of the topic, including making reference to a number of libraries that are using tagging at some level.Why Are They Tagging, and Why Do We Want Them To? I like thinking about tags as a triple: the tag, the thing tagged (picture, website, etc), and the person doing the tagging. All tags associated with a given item or a given person.All tags in common with a collection of items.A tag cloud to shows frequency-of-occurrence of all tags (or all tags from a specific user).All items tagged with the same tag as a tag on the current item.

Krawler[x] - Get Krawler[x] now Manual (EN) - TabblesWiki Tabbles 3 manual WIP: We've just lanched the version 3 (which is in "google beta") and we're working on the manual as we speak. There will be some empty sections and outdated info for a while... If you're lost please drop us a line at info at tabbles.net The word “tabble” stands for “tag-bubble”. Watch our training videos playlist Intro: why Tabbles? The whole chapter one is an introduction to the philosophy behind Tabbles: if things sound complicated right now, soon they won’t be anymore. How do we remember objects and sorting files We are used to store our files into folders and then sub-folders and sub-sub-folders. Objects in real life are stored in the same way: you store your socks in the left drawer of your closet In the same fashion you are used to store and organized your files on your hard-disk: “ you save the documents related to the product “A” inside the folder “A” as a subfolder of the folder “Manufacturer Alpha” as a subfolder of the folder “British manufacturers”.

Classer, trier et taguer pour retrouver : les enjeux documentaires du Web (2.0) - Clever Link - Veille - Clever Age Jusqu’à la période 2003-2004, les créateurs de contenu constituaient une frange assez marginale des utilisateurs du Web. Les utilisateurs étaient avant tout les consommateurs d’une information produite par quelques sources, et éventuellement reprises sur d’autres pages - les fameuses "pages personnelles" en tête. Avec l’avènement des blogs et de l’expression personnelle, la donne a peu à peu changé, pour finalement donner corps à un nouveau Web, un réseau de services au sein duquel l’internaute est autant créateur d’information qu’il en est consommateur. Web 2.0 : de quoi parle-t-on ? Présentation associée "Web 2.0". Le "Web 2.0", ce sont donc de nouveaux axiomes pour le Web, un nouvel ordre dans les envies, les pratiques et les habitudes des internautes. Tags contre catégories : quelle est la valeur ajoutée ? L’utilisation des "tags" [1] a été à la source de bouleversements rapides et phénoménaux dans les habitudes des utilisateurs avancés. Et le Web Sémantique, dans tout ça ?

Web 2.0 free buttons maker Yahoo's New VideoTagGame Lets You Tag Within Videos - ReadW The transfer of human intelligence to the machine is something the internet makes easy to do. With reCAPTCHA, we keep spammers at bay while helping digitize old books, Amazon's Mechanical Turk lets us crowdsource small tasks to a dynamic human workforce available on demand, and Google Image Labeler makes the tedious task of tagging fun. Now Yahoo is trying to tap into that human machine through their new VideoTagGame, a game that encourages participants to tag sections within a video for better retrieval. The first VideoTagGame ran back in summer of 2007 during a Yahoo! The objective of the VideoTagGame is to collect time-based annotations of the video which could then enable the retrieval of relevant parts in a video when a search is performed, rather than returning the entire video itself. How To Play To play the VideoTagGame, participants must sign in with their Yahoo! The game, like Google Image Labeler, can be both fun and challenging for those involved.

Who's got the tag? Database truth versus file truth, part 3 I’ve recently been exploring the implications of the following mantra: The truth is in the file. In this context it refers to a strategy for managing metadata (e.g., tags) primarily in digital files (e.g., JPEG images, Word documents) and only secondarily in a database derived from those files. Commenting on an entry that explores how Vista uses this technique for photo tags, Brian Dorsey throws down a warning flag: Many applications are guilty of changing JPEGs [ed: RAW file, not JPEGs, are the issue, see below] behind the scenes and there is nothing forcing them to do it in compatible ways. A cautionary tale, indeed. There is an interesting comparison to be made, for example, between OS X and Vista. My purpose here is not to discuss or debate the OS X and Vista interfaces for tagging files and searching for tagged files. In Vista, if I tag yellowflower.jpg with iris, that tag lives primarily in the file yellowflower.jpg and secondarily in a database. It’s a tough problem. Like this:

Upcoming.org: Home Icebrrg - HTML Web forms, surveys, and invitations made chillingly simple Hyperlinking the Real World - ReadWriteWeb European researchers working on the MOBVIS project have developed a new system that will allow camera phone users to hyperlink the real world. After taking a picture of a streetscape in an urban area, the MOBVIS technology identifies objects like buildings, infrastructure, monuments, cars, and even logos and banners. It then renders relevant information on the screen using icons that deliver text-based details about the object when clicked. This project goes beyond today's mapping applications like Google's Street View, for example, which first identifies your location either via GPS or triangulation and then shows you pictures of that area. There are obviously numerous potential applications for such a technology. Tourism/Augmented City Maps: The MOBVIS technology could be used to inform visitors about the objects in an area be them buildings or landmarks. How It Works The challenge here is getting a mobile phone picture to match up with the more pristine photos found in the database.

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