del.icio.us


 Saturday, 14 June 2008, 13:42 0

Simon Dickson: "A couple of additions seem worth mentioning: a box for ‘REACTION FROM AROUND THE WEB’ (ie blogs) on the homepage, plus feeds from del.icio.us and Twitter accounts; and the rather odd spectacle of Sarah Montague’s video review"

 Thursday, 17 April 2008, 13:41 0

"Birmingham Post features writer Jo Ind has started incorporating Del.icio.us social bookmarks into her articles. … phrasing the link as ’suggested links’ (rather than ‘iPM Delicious’) and positioning it at the bottom of an article rather than a

 Wednesday, 6 February 2008, 13:57 0

Some good advice from Martin Belam on how to integrate your social bookmarking and your blogging.

 Sunday, 20 January 2008, 16:34 0

"Yahoo is testing the integration of Delicious user generated bookmarks into Yahoo search results pages … Some users will see the Delicious icon as part of their normal search results, which tells them how many people have bookmarked those pages"

 Sunday, 13 January 2008, 10:37 0

Five things reporters can do to help grow newspaper.com traffic: start a blog, join social networks, use social bookmarking tools, use Digg etc, make YouTube videos…

 Friday, 4 January 2008, 20:53 0

Patent for a "System and method for selecting advertising in a social bookmarking system" … on del.icio.us.

 Monday, 24 September 2007, 17:44 0

"Google has launched its own version of Del.icio.us; a social bookmarking service called Google Shared Stuff that allows users to share their favourite links with friends."

 Wednesday, 12 September 2007, 09:16 0

The Project for Excellence in Journalism has compared 48 news sites with social news aggregators Digg, Reddit and del.icio.us. The study also compared the items selected for Yahoo News and user-driven pages.

Fleet Street 2.0

Hammersley on journalistic transparency

Wednesday, 27 June 2007, 09:34

Ben Hammersley, who is in Turkey as part of an experimental BBC reporting project using social media tools, explains why he is producing behind-the-scenes material about his work to sites like YouTube, Flickr, del.icio.us and Twitter.
The modern journalist, Hammersley writes in a piece for BBC News Online’s Magazine, is “a multi-media creature, feeding the beasts [...]

Continue Reading

 Wednesday, 27 June 2007, 09:24 0

Ben Hammersley: "[W]hile there’s more news available to you, you’re much less likely to know how it was made. … I think it’s easier, and more productive in the end, to do what my maths teacher was always forlornly begging me to do, and show my working."

 Thursday, 19 April 2007, 17:20 0

"A tool to check at-a-glance the link popularity of any site based on its ranking (Google PageRank, Alexa Rank, Technorati etc.), social bookmarks (del.icio.us, etc), subscribers (Bloglines, etc) and more!"

 Wednesday, 18 April 2007, 06:28 0

"Cloudalicious is a service that looks at how your blog has been bookmarked and tagged on the social bookmarking site del.icio.us, then plots it on a graph."

Visualising the UK journalism-blogger network

Thursday, 8 February 2007, 21:52

The UK Journalism Blogger network

As Robin Hamman points out, there are all sorts of personal connections between the journalists named in Press Gazette’s UK journalism blogroll feature today.

Because many of the bloggers named in the piece also use the social bookmarking tool del.icio.us, it is even possible to visualise these connections using the amazing (and addictive) Del.icio.us Network Explorer social network analysis tool.

The dark nodes in the network above are people named in connection with the Press Gazette piece. I’m the green dot in the middle (only because I started exporling the network with my own user name), and Robin Hamman is the orange one.

Jem Stone is the large node at the top with links to many of the others. The author of the Press Gazette feature, Graham Holliday is to Robin’s 10 o’clock position, and Richard Sambrook is at Robin’s 3 o’clock.

Further exploration of the network reveals some other important nodes in the network, whose involvment in the jounralism blogger community is largely centred on their del.icio.us use: Sun communities editor Ilana Fox and Trinity Mirror’s director of regional digital media, David Black. You should really be subscribing to their del.icio.us links’ RSS feeds.

Update: Ditto Alan Connor, Alistair Brown, and Bruce Combe.

(more…)

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