Guest guest Posted December 24, 2007 Report Share Posted December 24, 2007 Merry Christmas . I just did not understand what " tagged " means. Neither did anyone else here it seems. I just keep getting some message in my box saying I have been " tagged " ...... I don't know what that means. Hope you have the best day possible. hugs, Debra V. john honeycutt wrote: Hi,How are we today? All's well here @ home. Mom's cooking away for the big DAY. Tagging? I've never had any success w/it,maybe it's me or the puter but I've always had something prevent me from making it work. I've been tagged many times but have never been able to follow thru w/it. So to those of you that have tagged me well I just can't figure it out so I've never rejected anyones tag point blank. I've rejected no one!!! So if you tag me and you can't see my acceptance this is why!!! GOD Bless YOU All ! ! ! . . . ...................................Love A _________________________________________________________________ i’m is proud to present Cause Effect, a series about real people making a difference. http://im.live.com/Messenger/IM/MTV/?source=text_Cause_Effect Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 24, 2007 Report Share Posted December 24, 2007 Did anyone ever tell us what tagging means? I still don't know. Marti debra van ness wrote: Merry Christmas . I just did not understand what " tagged " means. Neither did anyone else here it seems. I just keep getting some message in my box saying I have been " tagged " ...... I don't know what that means. Hope you have the best day possible. hugs, Debra V. john honeycutt wrote: Hi,How are we today? All's well here @ home. Mom's cooking away for the big DAY. Tagging? I've never had any success w/it,maybe it's me or the puter but I've always had something prevent me from making it work. I've been tagged many times but have never been able to follow thru w/it. So to those of you that have tagged me well I just can't figure it out so I've never rejected anyones tag point blank. I've rejected no one!!! So if you tag me and you can't see my acceptance this is why!!! GOD Bless YOU All ! ! ! . . . ...................................Love A __________________________________________________________ i’m is proud to present Cause Effect, a series about real people making a difference. http://im.live.com/Messenger/IM/MTV/?source=text_Cause_Effect Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 24, 2007 Report Share Posted December 24, 2007 Tagging means different things on different websites and in various circumstances. For example, On facebook.com, myspace.com etc, you " tag " photos. Tagging a photo means that you identify the people pictured in the image. If the people are your Facebook friends, the tags will serve as links to their profiles. You can also " tag " photos on anyone's facebook site, just by suggest tags for them. To do this, click on the " Tag This Photo " link when you are browsing someone else's album. To tag the photo, simply click on a person's face in the photo, and then select their name in the box that pops up. If their name is not already in the box, you can provide it. Repeat this process for everyone in the photo. If you need to tag yourself, select " me. " Click the " Done Tagging " button at the top of the page once you've finished entering your tags. When you tag another person's photos, no one will be able to see that tag until the tag is confirmed by the person who uploaded the photo. On blogging websites, you " tag " fellow bloggers to to answer some sort of " Blog questionnaire " , or answer some kind of list question or just sign onto their blog guestbook. On social bookmarking websites, such as Flickr and del.icio.us, users are provided with a place to store, categorize, annotate and share favorite Web pages and files. On these pages you " tag " a web page when it is one you want to save.A window pops up with the URL and page name and optional fields for you to add notes and tags. Tags are single-word descriptors -- this is how social bookmark systems categorize content so that you and other users can find it. Many social networks, like myspace, hi-5, etc allow members to " tag " people who are not members which is basically an invite from them to join the social network website. There is also a website called Tagged.com which is supposedly an online social environment for teens to showcase their personalities and talents, and to connect with friends and meet new ones. Tagged maintains this great environment by only allowing teenagers to register on the site. However, many opinions of the site say it is nothing but spam once it gets your email. That's the few different instances of hte phrase I can think of right now. I'm sure that some members who are more computer literate than myself can probably come up with some more examples. lisa n. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 25, 2007 Report Share Posted December 25, 2007 Thank you for educating us about different kinds of tagging. Guess it is a computer-lingo term, and if none of participate in those social sites, then we wouldn't get it. Now we know, kind of. Jeanne in WI > Tagging means different things on different websites and in various > circumstances. For example, > > On facebook.com, myspace.com etc, you " tag " photos. Tagging a photo means > that you identify the people pictured in the image. If the people are your > Facebook friends, the tags will serve as links to their profiles. You can also " tag " photos on anyone's facebook site, just by suggest tags for them. To do this, click on the " Tag This Photo " link when you are browsing someone else's album. To tag the photo, simply click on a person's face in the photo, and then select their name in the box that pops up. If their name is not already in the box, you can provide it. Repeat this process for everyone in the photo. If you need to tag yourself, select " me. " Click the " Done Tagging " button at the top of the page once you've finished entering your tags. When you tag another person's photos, no one will be able to see that tag until the tag is confirmed by the person who uploaded the photo. > > On blogging websites, you " tag " fellow bloggers to to answer some sort of > " Blog questionnaire " , or answer some kind of list question or just sign > onto their blog guestbook. > > On social bookmarking websites, such as Flickr and del.icio.us, users are > provided with a place to store, categorize, annotate and share favorite > Web pages and files. On these pages you " tag " a web page when it is one > you want to save.A window pops up with the URL and page name and optional fields for you to add notes and tags. Tags are single-word descriptors -- this is how social bookmark systems categorize content so that you and other users can find it. > > Many social networks, like myspace, hi-5, etc allow members to " tag " > people who are not members which is basically an invite from them to join > the social network website. > > There is also a website called Tagged.com which is supposedly an online > social environment for teens to showcase their personalities and talents, > and to connect with friends and meet new ones. Tagged maintains this great > environment by only allowing teenagers to register on the site. However, many opinions of the site say it is nothing but spam once it gets your email. > > That's the few different instances of hte phrase I can think of right now. > I'm sure that some members who are more computer literate than myself can > probably come up with some more examples. > > lisa n. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 25, 2007 Report Share Posted December 25, 2007 I'm with you Jeanne. I now know, kind of. Marti Dave and Jeanne wrote: Thank you for educating us about different kinds of tagging. Guess it is a computer-lingo term, and if none of participate in those social sites, then we wouldn't get it. Now we know, kind of. Jeanne in WI > Tagging means different things on different websites and in various > circumstances. For example, > > On facebook.com, myspace.com etc, you " tag " photos. Tagging a photo means > that you identify the people pictured in the image. If the people are your > Facebook friends, the tags will serve as links to their profiles. You can also " tag " photos on anyone's facebook site, just by suggest tags for them. To do this, click on the " Tag This Photo " link when you are browsing someone else's album. To tag the photo, simply click on a person's face in the photo, and then select their name in the box that pops up. If their name is not already in the box, you can provide it. Repeat this process for everyone in the photo. If you need to tag yourself, select " me. " Click the " Done Tagging " button at the top of the page once you've finished entering your tags. When you tag another person's photos, no one will be able to see that tag until the tag is confirmed by the person who uploaded the photo. > > On blogging websites, you " tag " fellow bloggers to to answer some sort of > " Blog questionnaire " , or answer some kind of list question or just sign > onto their blog guestbook. > > On social bookmarking websites, such as Flickr and del.icio.us, users are > provided with a place to store, categorize, annotate and share favorite > Web pages and files. On these pages you " tag " a web page when it is one > you want to save.A window pops up with the URL and page name and optional fields for you to add notes and tags. Tags are single-word descriptors -- this is how social bookmark systems categorize content so that you and other users can find it. > > Many social networks, like myspace, hi-5, etc allow members to " tag " > people who are not members which is basically an invite from them to join > the social network website. > > There is also a website called Tagged.com which is supposedly an online > social environment for teens to showcase their personalities and talents, > and to connect with friends and meet new ones. Tagged maintains this great > environment by only allowing teenagers to register on the site. However, many opinions of the site say it is nothing but spam once it gets your email. > > That's the few different instances of hte phrase I can think of right now. > I'm sure that some members who are more computer literate than myself can > probably come up with some more examples. > > lisa n. --------------------------------- Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your homepage. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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