Yahoo has integrated its Delicious bookmarking service with Twitter and added better search tools to help users find the freshest bookmarks.
The Fresh Bookmarks tab on the Delicious home page shows users the most recently saved Delicious bookmarks that are popping on Twitter. Think of this as a hot trends feature in Twitter, Google Bing or Yahoo, but for the Delicious bookmarking tool instead.
“This algorithm combines the latest actions on Delicious and popular discussions on Twitter to bring you the best and freshest links about technology, web, politics, and media,” Yahoo Director of Product Management Ariel Seidman wrote in a blog post Aug. 4.
When users save a bookmark from Delicious using the Firefox extension or bookmarklets, they can e-mail or tweet their bookmarks right from Delicious instead of copying and pasting URLs into e-mails or Twitter updates. These options are visible when users add recipients in the Send field.
The new Delicious search tools include advanced timeline and tag filtering controls so that users can search within a given date range or filter the results by tag to help find the freshest bookmarks. This is particularly useful for Delicious users who have been using the service for several years and have thousands of bookmarks stored.
The search results page has also been enhanced to display YouTube videos with inline playback, Flickr images and Yelp local data. Users can see pictures of the new tools at the Google Watch blog here.
The advanced search tools are a nice improvement, but the Delicious team really needed to surface Twitter tweets to keep up with all of the real-time search innovation happening at companies like OneRiot, Collecta, TweetMeme and Topsy.
Microsoft’s Bing search engine is already indexing Twitter tweets. Facebook is also beginning to surface real-time information, and Google will likely follow.
Delicious built a bridge to Twitter to stay relevant at a time when several Yahoo acquisitions are falling into the growing deadpool of castoffs.
Delicious’ parent is also going to get into the real-time search sweepstakes.
Yahoo search executives have also pledged to look hard at real-time indexing in the wake of the 10-year search ad blockbuster deal Microsoft and Yahoo struck July 29.