More notes. This time an informal Edubloggercon session to get us started with Diigo. Alice Mercer along with Margaret Tsai who is one of the developers of Diigo and Jen Dorman who has been using it with her students.
(I know. I’m probably the last person to look at Diigo. What can I say? I was busy and Del.icio.us was mostly meeting my needs. And I admit I quelled a bit at the thought of yet another social network.)
Plays Well With Others
Lots of options for sharing your Diigo info, including auto post to blog or Twitter and share with your Del.icio.us account. Can also import your Delicious accounts.
Groups
Can be public, private, moderated. Can share tags. Can create student accounts using linked Gmail addresses.
Lists
We are familiar with tagging, but sometimes you want to present specific lists of URLs. We can create lists and then “add to list” is one of the Diigo options.
So, my take? I don’t need it for use with students. If I were a classroom teacher then yes. But as a specialist in a school that has not embraced Diigo, then no. I also don’t need another social network. I’m not doing that well keeping up with the ones I’m already in. I think its strength is in searching things people have already bookmarked, which is the same as with Delicious. Other strenght is huge– ability to mark up the page and share the annotations. I can see that being really powerful for personal and class use.