SocialBookmarking

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  • Pinterest adds more data to your boards with rich pins

    by 
    Terrence O'Brien
    Terrence O'Brien
    05.20.2013

    Pinterest is already an absurdly popular way to save stuff from around the web, be it shoes you love, accessories for your bridesmaids or decorations for your man cave. One thing the social-bookmarking service has been missing, however, is context. Now it's offering a way for companies to deliver more info, through metadata attached to particular types of pages. Rich pins, as they're being called, can automatically attach price and availability to a product, or ingredient lists to recipes. There are also movie pins, which let sites attach ratings and credits to films. Pinterest has lined up an impressive list of partners to help it launch the new feature, including Netflix, Etsy, ASOS, REI, The North Face, Modcloth, Bon Appetit, Epicurious and Real Simple. All your old pins that now have contextual data will automatically be updated (which you'll be able to identify thanks to icons below them), and you can check out some example boards at the source link.

  • Pukka 1.6 brings menubar item, Spotlight support and more

    by 
    David Chartier
    David Chartier
    08.10.2007

    Pukka is one of our favorite utilities for posting to del.icio.us, Yahoo!'s social bookmarking site, and an update today helps an already great utility integrate even better with the way you work. Pukka v1.6, available via its built-in update system, now offers a menubar item with complete access to your bookmarks, organized by tag. Bookmarks are now indexed by Spotlight, and accessing the list of your 'marks via the Dock icon is far snappier. There are also of course a few bug and UI fixes, and those running the latest Leopard beta (as of this writing) can now use Pukka. A demo of Pukka is available, while a single license costs $12.95.

  • Delicious vs. .Mac bookmark syncing

    by 
    Dave Caolo
    Dave Caolo
    03.07.2006

    Dave Chartier and I were talking about Del.icio.us earlier today, in the secret TUAW offices in Reese Witherspoon's guest house. He loves Delicious, and I had never used it. For years now, I've been happily chugging along with .Mac's bookmark syncing feature, and my own organization of the bookmark bar. Yet, at Dave's suggestion, I gave Delicious a try. After installing Delibar and exporting my bookmarks with Safarilicious, I was ready to go.The Delicious Pros First of all, it's very easy to add a bookmark. Just add the droplet to your menubar and give it a click. Next, the tagging is just great. By adding tags to my bookmarks (like "apple," "blog," "daily" or "family") I can easily find the site (or group of sites) I'm looking for. The social aspect is also very appealing. If I want to find sites that other users have tagged as "apple" or "tech," that's a snap. Finally, I have access to my bookmarks from any internet enabled computer, on any operating system. You can't beat that. I can even add bookmarks to my collection from any of those random machines. Sounds great, and it is. But I'm not going to use it. Here's why.The Delicious Cons This may sound petty, but it's huge to me. No "open in tabs." I keep my bookmarks highly organized, and I have several folders that categorize links into "Daily," "Apple," "WIN," etc. The first thing I do each morning is right-click on the "Daily" folder and select "Open in tabs." I then move from tab to tab, closing ones I'm not interested in and keeping the good ones open for more thorough inspection later. While Delibar allows for greater organization than a plain old browser does, it won't allow for my "open in tabs" routine. Plus, it only lets me open one link at a time, and each in a new window! That is totally unacceptable.Also, I'm not going to keep a web page open just because it contains my bookmarks. The bookmark bar was invented to extinguish this annoyance. Now, I understand that I can subscribe to Delicious RSS feeds, and that's great, but I really like to have my sites open in a series of tabs. It's just my preferred way to work.What I Like About .MacWell, several of the Delicious pros are a part of .Mac's bookmark sync. I can access my bookmarks from any internet enabled computer by going to bookmarks.mac.com, and I can add a new link to any of the folders I created on my Mac at home from the computer I happen to be using (be it a Mac, a Windows machine or what have you). Aside from the social aspect of Delicious, this is what's most appealing to me. Speaking of social bookmarking...What .Mac Could Learn from DeliciousNo tagging. Once you've created a bunch of tags, you miss them when they're gone. For highly organized neatnicks like me, creating and utilizing tags upon tags is very satisfying. I just don't get that with Safari. Also, the social aspect of Delicious-that is, the ability to browse other people's bookmarks-is way cool and something that would be a great feature of .Mac. I'd love to see this implemented some day.Conclusion Delicious is fantastic, but it simply doesn't fit my personal style of working. I'm not knocking it in any way, but I just like to be able to "categorize" sites as either "interesting," "follow-up" or "ditch it" on the fly. Plus, aside from the tagging and sharing, .Mac lets me do what I want to do with my bookmarks: Access and add to them from any computer. For now at least, I'm sticking with .Mac.

  • Delibar - the missing link of social bookmarking?

    by 
    David Chartier
    David Chartier
    02.25.2006

    I love the concept of social bookmarking sites like del.icio.us and Shadows. When we found Safarilicious I immediately used it to upload all 1050 of my bookmarks to del.icio.us, and I use it to help organize bookmarks for all sorts of projects I'm working on with friends.My one complaint about these services is that, aside from Flock "getting it" and actually building support for del.icio.us (and Shadows) right into their browser, social bookmarking feels very one-way in its interactivity: there hasn't been any way to access them as easily as your favorite browser's bookmarks menu (and no, Cocoalicious doesn't quite get there). Further, the problem is compounded if you're like me and you either want or have to work in more than one browser.Fortunately, I just found the utility that solves these problems and brings all your socializing bookmarks back home to your desktop: Delibar. Fitting into the "do one thing, and do it well" category that we at TUAW love so much, Delibar (as you can see) is a free menubar app that serves as a "universal bookmarks menu" for all your del.icio.us bookmarks, sorted into folders by the tags you've assigned. This, my friends, is exactly what I've been looking for. To the del.icio.us crew, if you're listening: you need to help this guy out in one way or another. If I may be so bold: you guys should have offered something like this the day that you flipped the switch on your services. To the developer of Delibar: thank you! Finally, to you TUAW readers: I highly recommend you check out this most useful of utilities, and I urge you to donate if you wind up finding it even half as useful as I have.