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Clean Up Your Bookmarks

June 26th, 2007 by Stephen

Posted in Communication, Content, Digital Apps, Networking, Web 2.0 |

Welcome back! It's good to see you again. Please note that I am now publishing all new material at my hub site: In Context Blog

IF you have not already added the Foxmarks plugin to your FireFox browser, what are you waiting for? The author is going to add a new search service this year that looks to be spectacular: (from TechCrunch)

[Kapor’s] popular Firefox plugin, Foxmarks, has been downloaded 700,000 times and has 350,000 active users.

All those users create some very well organized bookmark data. Unlike Del.icio.us, where people throw thousands of bookmarks for later reference, users tend to have fewer, but more important, bookmarks linked directly from their browser. And they spend more time properly annotating those bookmarks, Kapor says. So far, Foxmarks is tracking 250 million bookmarks, from 20 million unique URLs.

And now Kapor, along with his partner, Todd Agulnick, are going to use that data to launch a new search engine. Expect it to debut in a few months.

This is very exciting, as more user-generated data (in the form of tags and other meta-data) is becoming available to increasing numbers of users. In fact, TechCrunch mentions this specifically:

The Foxmarks search engine is based entirely on user bookmarks and the associated metadata. Don’t expect pages and pages of results like you get with Google. But you will get a few results for most queries that are highly relevant and on target. When returning and ranking results, Foxmarks takes into consideration the text in the title of the URL, the names of any folders people have put the bookmarks in, and any descriptions added by users. All of this information is shown in the results.


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This work by Stephen Smith is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.