Furl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Furl (from File Uniform Resource Locators) is a free social bookmarking website (furl.net) that allows members to store searchable copies of webpages and share them with others. Every member receives 5 gigabytes of storage space. The site was founded by Mike Giles in 2003, and purchased by LookSmart in 2004[1].

Contents

[edit] Features

A social bookmarking site like del.icio.us, Furl enables members to bookmark, annotate, and share web pages. Topics are used to categorize saved sites, similar to the tagging feature of other social websites. Additionally, a user may write comments, save clippings, assign each bookmark a rating and keywords (which are given greater weight while searching), and have an option of private or public storage for each topic or item archived.

Considered one of its main features[2], Furl also privately archives a complete copy of each page that a user bookmarks, making it accessible even if the original content is modified or removed, an antidote for link rot. This also allows full text searches to be made within the archive. To avoid claims of copyright violations, this archived copy is visible only to the member who bookmarked the page. Other users are directed to the publisher's site, where the content can be viewed depending on membership requirements and privacy settings.

Users may see lists of other users who have furled a URL, and read their comments (if made public) to find users who share interests, supporting folksonomy. A dynamic recommendation list is available to each user, automatically based on the sites already saved by him or her and other users with similar interests. Lists of the most popular items for today (and by topic) are also available. It's possible to subscribe to a user's archive (or to a set of topics in a user's archive) to get daily email notifications whenever new items are filed.

Furl allows bookmarks to be imported from (and exported to) Internet Explorer, Mozilla/Firefox, and del.icio.us; and also supports exporting of the entire saved archives to ZIP formats, and export metadata to XML format. There are other import/export functions, including various citation formats: Export to MLA, APA, Chicago, CBE, BibTeX, RIS/EndNote citations. [3] Toolbars and bookmarklets are available for Internet Explorer and Firefox to quicken the bookmarking process.

[edit] Limitations

The search result displays items from the entire Furl archive, or only from a user's own archive, but the sequence of these results is automatically ordered. There is no option to display results by date order, by popularity order, or in any other particular sequence. It is not obvious how the results are ordered.

The popularity of Furl has grown[4], and this has exposed users to performance problems which began in the latter half of 2006 and have persisted into 2007[5].

[edit] Updates

New features were released in early 2007, including an updated user-interface.[6]

[edit] See Also

[edit] External Links


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