Corante

Authors

Clay Shirky
( Archive | Home )

Liz Lawley
( Archive | Home )

Ross Mayfield
( Archive | Home )

Sébastien Paquet
( Archive | Home )

David Weinberger
( Archive | Home )

danah boyd
( Archive | Home )

Guest Authors
Site Search
Monthly Archives
Syndication
RSS 1.0
RSS 2.0
Check out the The AppGap - a group blog on the tools and trends that are changing the way we work.

Many-to-Many

« Popularity Slider: Diving into the long tail | Main | 2005 International Symposium on Wikis »

March 1, 2005

Vimeo - tagged video

Email This Entry

Posted by David Weinberger

Vimeo lets you assemble video based on author’s tags. For example, you could automatically assemble a movie about concerts, about funny things, or all the video Steve Garfield’s posted. [Thanks to Steve Garfield for the link. Steve also recommends an essay by Jakob Lodwick called Tagwebs, Flicker and the Human Brain. I haven’t read it yet.] [Technorati tags: ]

Comments (1) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: social software


COMMENTS

1. raymond m. kristiansen on March 2, 2005 11:34 AM writes...

Vimeo is really something! We (Norwegian Liberal Youth) have made a political videoblog where the whole organization will post video. We will have something posted every day. We are planning to use Vimeo in some way or other in order to be able to tag our video footage from for instance meetings and thus have a very flexible set of 1 minute files instead of one heavy 45 minute movie.

Permalink to Comment

TRACKBACKS

TrackBack URL:
http://www.corante.com/cgi-bin/mt/teriore.fcgi/1857.

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Vimeo - tagged video:


EMAIL THIS ENTRY TO A FRIEND

Email this entry to:

Your email address:

Message (optional):




RELATED ENTRIES
Spolsky on Blog Comments: Scale matters
"The internet's output is data, but its product is freedom"
Andrew Keen: Rescuing 'Luddite' from the Luddites
knowledge access as a public good
viewing American class divisions through Facebook and MySpace
Gorman, redux: The Siren Song of the Internet
Mis-understanding Fred Wilson's 'Age and Entrepreneurship' argument
The Future Belongs to Those Who Take The Present For Granted: A return to Fred Wilson's "age question"