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July 31, 2008 12:10 PM PDT

Yahoo gives Delicious more speed, fewer punctuation marks

by Stephen Shankland
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Yahoo has revamped Delicious, saying the site for storing, describing, and sharing Web site bookmarks is faster, easier to use, and has better search abilities.

Delicious site redesign

The updated look to Yahoo's Delicious Web site for storing, searching, tagging, and sharing bookmarks. (Click to enlarge.)

(Credit: Yahoo)

The speedup comes from a new server system that's snappier and more reliable, Yahoo said on its Delicious blog on Thursday. "You may not have noticed, but the old back-end was getting creaky under the load of 5 million users," the company said.

But for me, half the productivity gains will come from a rebranding of the service. No more will my fingers trip over my keyboard trying to type "del.icio.us," the old name of the service, because Yahoo now is calling it just plain old Delicious. (And conveniently conforming with CNET's ages-old spelling in the process.)

"We've seen a zillion different confusions and misspellings of 'del.icio.us' over the years (for example, 'de.licio.us', 'del.icio.us.com', and 'del.licio.us'), so moving to delicious.com will make it easier for people to find the site and share it with their friends," Yahoo said. The name change also means users will have to log in again.

The older Delicious limited descriptions of bookmarks to 255 characters, a cap that gave some appeal to rivals such as Ma.gnolia, but the new Delicious raises it to 1,000 characters. However, the Firefox plug-in I'm using to tag sites still imposes the 255-character limit.

Though Yahoo is working to unify its profiles, Delicious accounts are still separate from those at Flickr, Yahoo Mail.

Delicious founder Joshua Schachter left Yahoo in June.

Here's Yahoo's official word on the changes:

Speed: We've moved to a new infrastructure that makes every page faster. This new platform will enable us to keep up with traffic growth while ensuring Delicious is responsive and reliable...

Search: We've completely overhauled our search engine to make it faster and more powerful. Searches used to take ages to return results; now they're very quick. The new search engine is also smarter, and more social: you can search within one of your tags, another user's public bookmarks, or your social network. Now it's easier to take advantage of the expertise and interests of your friends, not to mention the Delicious community at large.

Design: Finally, we've updated the user interface to improve usability and add a few often-requested features (such as selectable detail levels and alphabetical sorting of bookmarks). Our goal has been to keep the new design similar in spirit to the old one, so all of you veterans should be able to jump in without any confusion. At the same time, we're hoping that newcomers to Delicious will find it easier to learn.

Originally posted at Webware
Stephen Shankland writes about a wide range of technology and products, but has a particular focus on browsers and digital photography. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered Google, Yahoo, servers, supercomputing, Linux and open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/stshank.
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by thabassman July 31, 2008 12:30 PM PDT
awesome.
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by Adam2453 July 31, 2008 2:27 PM PDT
This new Delicious ROCKS!!!!!!
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by Tsee-1968031069905097881578618 July 31, 2008 2:57 PM PDT
Can't believe it took so long.

I'm not actually a Delicious user, but Yahoo's got more sense... Sort of like "mu-torrent."
Reply to this comment
by bollonet July 31, 2008 7:17 PM PDT
its bad they still havent maked it possible to use tag combinations in bundles to create dynamic categories. as it is now tag bundles is still primitive, no more than containers
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by sparksvalley July 31, 2008 9:01 PM PDT
I use it, besides being a bookmark back-up, I honestly don't know what else to use it for.
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by fun2program8 August 2, 2008 5:02 AM PDT
This comment, amongst so many serious facts, breathes with humor:
"The name change also means users will have to log in again."

Oh no! What will we do? *GASP*! (heheh)
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by hank0212 August 2, 2008 6:56 AM PDT
We use delicious to bookmark everything in a single place. It can be a benefit to find places quickly.

Jay
www.romanceexpressions.com
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