diigo - ReadWriteWeb http://www.readwriteweb.com/feeds/tag/diigo en Copyright 2012 Richard MacManus readwriteweb@gmail.com Wed, 15 Feb 2012 06:00:00 -0800 http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/?v=4.35-en http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss iChromy: Bookmarking Service Diigo Releases A Chrome-like iPad Browser ichromy150.jpgI doubt that Google has plans to bring its Chrome browser to the iPad anytime soon, but for fans of Chrome, there's a new app you might want to consider: iChromy.

The app has some of the look and feel of the Chrome browser. There are tabs at the top of the screen and an omnibox that'll let you perform searches as well as type URLs. There's also a little star on the side of the omnibox, just like Chrome, that lets you bookmark pages.

]]> iChromy_ss.jpgYou can also save pages to read them offline and send pages to other third-party services, including Facebook, Evernote, Twitter, Instapaper, and Diigo. The latter service is key as this app is actually the creation of the bookmarking service Diigo, and for users of the site, the easy integration with one's saved bookmarks might be reason alone to use the new iPad browser.

iChromy isn't particularly feature-rich, and it's missing some elements that other iPad browsers have, including the ability to set a Web page to your home screen.

But if you're a fan of tabbed browsing, then you might be quite pleased with iChromy. The stability and speed of the app are pretty impressive. In order to avoid memory issues with having multiple tabs open, iChromy reloads tabs dynamically when you need to access them again.

The app is free, but Diigo says future releases of iChromy will have more advanced options that coincide with Diigo's own annotation and highlighting features, which are part of Diigo's premium bookmarking services.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/ichromy_bookmarking_service_diigo_releases_a_chrom.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/ichromy_bookmarking_service_diigo_releases_a_chrom.php Browsers Mon, 30 May 2011 20:01:43 -0800 Audrey Watters
LookSmart Hands Over Social Bookmarking Service Furl to Diigo diigo_logo_mar09.pngSearch advertising network LookSmart and Diigo, a popular web annotation and research tool, announced a new partnership today. Under the terms of this partnership, LookSmart will transfer Furl, its struggling social bookmarking service, to Diigo. However, while Diigo announced this as an acquisition of Furl, the reality is that Looksmart is getting an equity position in Diigo in return.

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LookSmart acquired Furl in September 2004. At the time, the company announced that it wanted to leverage the data it gathered about users' online behavior through Furl in order to create better search algorithms for web search. Over time, however LookSmart has withdrawn from improving search and the company sold off its FindArticles search engine to CNET in late 2007. Given that Furl is not part of LookSmart's core business anymore, it only makes sense for the company to offload responsibility for the service. We can't help but wonder if LookSmart actually tried to sell Furl but, given the current economic climate, wasn't able to find a partner that wanted to acquire the service directly.

A Good Fit for Diigo

Diigo looks like a good fit for Furl, as it also provides social bookmarking services at the core of its product. Furl at one point looked like it had a bright future ahead of it, but it never really took off. In February 2008, Furl launched a major redesign of its site, which included interesting new features like cached-copy archiving, export in bibliographic formats, and recommendations. According to Diigo, Furl has about one million users - though, as usual, it is hard to say how many of these are active users.

It is not clear how (or if) Diigo will integrate Furl into its own product, but in the announcement, Diigo stresses that it will release version 4.0 of its service soon. Whether this will already feature some integration of Furl's features remains to be seen. For now, Diigo has released a tool that allows Furl users to easily transfer their bookmarks over to Diigo.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/diigo_acquires_furl.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/diigo_acquires_furl.php News Mon, 09 Mar 2009 09:23:16 -0800 Frederic Lardinois
Diigo Tackles Recommendations Diigo is a social bookmarking and research tool that offers so many features it's overwhelming. I've been excited about it before, only to find that after a short period of time, I stop using it - in favor of something simpler. I have been really excited about it, in fact, but even the highlights of today's new version leave me with tempered enthusiasm.

The highlight of the new version is recommendations. The new Diigo offers a number of social networking type features that in-and-of themselves aren't worth a lot to me, but if they can do some number crunching and recommend people and content that I may want to subscribe to - that's gold.

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What's the biggest crime committed by Del.icio.us? It's not leveraging the huge amount of data the service holds for some recommendations. Why on earth, in this data-centric era, isn't every social bookmarking service making bookmarking social and smart? If Yahoo! held an Amazon-style contest for recommendation algorithms that could be run against Del.icio.us, they could set up a Yahoo! News style page that was personalized like nobody's business. We'd all come back daily to read Del.icio.us, they could run ads up the wazoo and everyone would be beside themselves with happiness.

Instead we'll have to look to a pre-acquisition startup with neither network effect nor scaling problems. Diigo has potential to change the social bookmarking game just because they are offering recommendations. The recommendations aren't even very good yet because there's very few people using the service and the algorithm appears quite simple. I imported several hundred bookmarks from Ma.gnolia and perhaps Diigo will think deeper thoughts about my history after a few hours. I'm not so sure, though. It's still worth a look because it has so much potential.

You might also like the annotation features, though in all likelihood they will prove more trouble than they are worth unless you're an academic. You can associate an OpenID account with your Diigo account now, too. That's good.

Trust

Checking out Diigo could be pretty pain-free. The service does a good job of importing your bookmarks from elsewhere and allows you to publish simultaneously to your account at Del.ico.us, Ma.gnolia or Simpy. If, that is, you are willing to trust the Diigo people with the password to your usual social bookmarking account. Doesn't Ma.gnolia at least have oAuth support so I don't have to do that? Discussion about user authentication protocols as part of data portability seem common enough by now that it's outright offensive to be asked for your password to another web app. If you can deal with that, then there's no reason not to give Diigo a try.

Check out Diigo for yourself, it could be just what you're looking for. It's getting closer to something I can imagine using regularly and really appreciating - but it's not there yet. I'll keep an eye on the recommendations feature because if that ends up working out well, it would be reason enough to switch to Diigo.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/diigo_version_3_recommendations.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/diigo_version_3_recommendations.php Product Reviews Thu, 20 Mar 2008 06:00:00 -0800 Marshall Kirkpatrick