TagTeam: Difference between revisions

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| style="background:orange; color:black"  | See the [https://cyber.harvard.edu/story/2018-08/major-upgrade-tagteam-open-source-tagging-platform release announcement] for version 2.1.0.6, August 28, 2018, from the [http://cyber.harvard.edu/ Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society].
| style="background:orange; color:black"  | See the August 28, 2018, [https://cyber.harvard.edu/story/2018-08/major-upgrade-tagteam-open-source-tagging-platform release announcement] for version 2.1.0.6, from the [http://cyber.harvard.edu/ Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society].
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Revision as of 09:58, 28 August 2018

Contents
See the August 28, 2018, release announcement for version 2.1.0.6, from the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society.
  • In addition to ordinary social tagging and bookmarking, TagTeam supports tag contributions from multiple platforms ("interoperable tagging"), the evolution of standard tag vocabularies ("folksonomy in, ontology out"), and boolean feed aggregation ("remix feeds"). Every tag and search publishes a feed in RSS, Atom, and JSON. TagTeam can subscribe to feeds from other platforms, and remix them with its own feeds. It stores all its tag records for deduping, export, preservation, modification, and search.
  • TagTeam was initially developed to meet the needs of the Open Access Tracking Project (OATP). But it's now a general-purpose tool for open, tag-based research projects on any topic. OATP is now just one of many hubs in TagTeam.
  • The Harvard instance of TagTeam is limited to academic or research projects. However the code is open and anyone may host other instances elsewhere.