-
Navigation
-
About
Stephanie Booth lives in Lausanne, Switzerland with her cat Bagha.
She works as a freelance blogging consultant, and is basically interested in anything that has to do with people and the internet {insert appropriate buzzwords: "social software", "participatory media", "web 2.0"...}.
Read all the exciting details about her life and Climb to the Stars.
-
Search All My Stuff
-
Archives by Month
-
Recent Posts
-
Recent Comments on CTTS
- The Angry Offender on MySpace Banning Sex Offenders: Online Predator Paranoia
- Stephanie on Just because something is easy to measure doesn’t mean it’s important (Seth Godin)
- Matt Balara on Just because something is easy to measure doesn’t mean it’s important (Seth Godin)
- Tim on Just because something is easy to measure doesn’t mean it’s important (Seth Godin)
- lost in data » Extension for Basic Bilingual Wordpress Plugin on Basic Bilingual Plugin
-
Upcoming Events -
Delicious Links
- memoria technica » Blog Archive » Houston, I Have A Problem
- Conference: Going Solo, Leeds 12 September 2008 « chinwag
- Destroy Those Old Hard Drives
What do you do with your old hard drives?
- Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video -- Publications -- Center for Social Media at American University
- Event Promotion With Social Media - Harder Than It Looks | Event Planning & Marketing
- Vitamin B6 - Dreamviews lucid dreaming forums
- vitamin B-6 - Dreamviews lucid dreaming forums
Some interesting information scattered about on B6 vitamin.
- AUTISM RESEARCH INSTITUTE
- Dunod - livre 150 petites expériences de psychologie des médias pour mieux comprendre comment on vous manipule - Sébastien Bohler
Sébastien Bohler
- Les conseils d'un scientifique pour moins se faire manipuler par les médias | Les Quotidiennes
- SimplyNoise.com - The best free white noise generator on the Internet.
Online white noise generator.
- Why I Love Empty Job Freelancing - FreelanceSwitch - The Freelance Blog
- MikeHugh.es » Blog Archive » Link Title v0.2 Released
Felt useful in #wordpress yesterday, and gave Mike a hand for his first plugin. Here's the result!
- Votre joystick nuit gravement à la santé - Forums GeekZone
- Chocolate and Vodka » Going Solo Leeds - Registration open





Feeds For Tags!
Similar:
Specially for you today, something that will make tagging comments really useful: feeds by user and tag. Let’s look at an example together to see how it works.
First, a reminder: you already know you can subscribe to a user’s comments or the conversations that user has participated in. For that, you use the RSS feed links that are displayed on every user’s page. For example, mine look like this:
http://cocomment.com/rss2/steph.rsshttp://cocomment.com/myrss2/steph.rssYou can also subscribe to comments identified by a given tag. This has been around for a while, but for some reason the link to the feed wasn’t visible on the page. It is now. Thus, to subscribe to comments tagged “coComment” you would use the following feed:
http://cocomment.com/rss2Tag/cocomment.rssOK so far? Ready for the juicy part? How about subscribing to all the comments one user makes on a particular topic, identified by a tag? For example, maybe you don’t care much about the comments I usually make, but you want to keep an eye on the comments I tag “coComment”. If you’re on somebody’s conversations page (or yours!) and you click on a tag there, you’ll see an extra feed (labeled “Tag”) in the user feeds. For example:
http://cocomment.com/rss2Tag/cocomment/steph.rssPretty neat! But we didn’t stop there. We’ve added a little extra special something for when you want to subscribe to your own tags. You see, subscribing to my own comments tagged “superimportant” isn’t going to be very useful. It would be much more interesting if you could subscribe to the conversations in which you once used a given tag, wouldn’t it?
Well, you can do just that. If you go to your own user page, click on a tag, and subscribe to the “Tag” user feed you find there, you’ll see that it actually subscribes you to the conversations in which you used that tag.
This opens up all sorts of exciting doors about using tags (and creating tags!) to track certain conversations and not others. I have that problem all the time: I leave comments all over the place, but I’m not as interested in tracking certain conversations as I am others. For me, it’s really important to track my conversations tagged “coComment” seriously, so I’ll subscribe to this feed and check it regularly:
http://cocomment.com/rss2/cocomment/steph.rss(to be precise: conversations in which I posted a comment tagged “coComment”)I could also use another tag called “important” or “priority” to label conversations I want to track more actively than the usual chatter that I just check once in a while on my conversations page. (I’m not doing it yet, but writing all this is making me realise this is the solution to my conversation overload problems!)
What about you? How do you like the new tag/user feeds? Are you using tags to help you track your conversations better? Share your experiences with your fellow coCommenters in the comments.
Happy tagging!
technorati tags:feeds, tagging, cocomment, users, tags, explanation, features, links
Initially posted on the coComment blog.