del.icio.us is still giving me food for thought. Here are two toys I've made recently: a tag stemming tool that helps you tidy up your tagging using the Porter algorithm, and a (Flash) screen-recorded demo of del.icio.us seamlessly embedded in the BBC Radio 3 website.
(Maximize your browser window! Apologies for the slow playback speed of the movie; although you're welcome to browse the javascript, it's something of a pain to get it running on your own browser. I'm looking at how I can turn it into a reusable and configurable Firefox extension, but for now it's just a demo built with Greasemonkey.)
UPDATE: I had to demo this to a mixed audience at the BBC this afternoon, so I put together some quick slides to help me explain the step-by-step process that goes on behind the scenes. Perhaps someone else will find them useful too.
So, what are you seeing in this movie? It's nothing more than a bit of DHTML trickery that imports a subset of del.icio.us functionality into an existing website. I chose BBC Radio 3 because it has a wealth of content with plenty of potential for horizontal navigation, and because it has a clearly-defined canonical URL per programme and thereby gains the maximum benefit from being tagged. By creating a symbiotic relationship between the two sites in your browser, you gain an overlaid cross-site navigation that doesn't exist in the site as it currently stands, and del.icio.us users see your tagging of Radio 3 pages in the wider context.
There are several things that I enjoy in this demo. In no particular order:
There are many more possibilities to explore. The demo uses a single user on del.icio.us for all tagging. Imagine instead being able to select between different tag sets to overlay - one to guide newcomers to classical music, another designed for experts and old hands, a third to explore the history of a particular instrument or musical movement.
web Posted by Matt Biddulph at January 30, 2005 11:42 PM
→ The Obvious?: The joys of tagging
→ Joho the Blog: Best D'oh! of the year so far
→ Many-to-Many: Embedded del.icio.us - Tagging's future illustrated
→ netbib weblog: Stemming tags, and one website to the tune of another
→ Then each went to his own home: Crosslinking