Table of contents
[MISSING]Easy ways to find and connect with people by their proximity in
interest, location, industry, name, or various advanced search options.
- People Like Me:
"You are what you annotate!" Your public bookmarks, tags, etc. are
the best expression of your interest. Through dynamic algorithm, we
randomly select and display users with similar interests as yours.
Check back often for fun discovery!
- People Online: Green dot next to each user's avatar indicates his online status. Here we randomly display users who are online.
- In The Same Industry:
Through information you provided in your profile, meet other users
within the same industry. Lots of valuable resources waiting for your
discovery!
- Search People:
- By Name: Find people by entering their Diigo username or real name
- By Tags: By entering tag(s), you can easily discover other users interested in that subject, or what we call, "Tag Community"
- By Sites:
By entering a site's URL, you can easily discover other users
interested in that site and the aggregated bookmarks for that site, or
what we call, "Site Community"
- By URL:
Instead of an entire site, sometimes you may wish to focus on a
specific webpage. This is the perfect place for you to discover other
people also interested in this page.
- Advanced Search: Allow you to find people according to specific criteria that they have filled out in their user profile.
Other salient features:
- User Synopsis:
As you browse through each user, a summary of his / her recent public
activities allows you to have a quick glimpse of user's interest.
- Common Stuff is a great feature that shows proximity and what you have in common with a user
- Invite them to a group:
A premium invitation-only feature - we will grant this special
privilege to only authorized users who have established a history of
active participation and quality content contribution to the Diigo
community. With this special privilege, they will be able to send a
batch invite to people found through various common interest search
result to form their own interest public or private group(s). As a
result of this selective user filtered process, more high-quality
special interest / knowledge domain groups should emerge.