Kate tagged me to do this thing. In an effort to avoid doing something right now (like, writing 2 proposals), I’ll play. So, this meme is all about the five things you wouldn’t know about me.
- I love WWE and will always be a fan.
- My favourite time of year is winter and I would take a ski trip to Whistler over a 7-day stay on a Caribbean beach any day.
- When I close my right eye, I can barely see out of my left one due to a childhood accident.
- My first taste at entrepreneurship happened when I was 9-years old. I sold homemade scratch-n-sniff stickers for 5-cents to classmates.
- Although my parents are from Jamaica, I can’t stomach most Caribbean fruits. Just the smell of mangoes, ackee, passion fruit and guava (among others) are enough to make me hurl.
I now tag 5 other people to tell us 5 things we don’t know about you – Bryan Person, Jason Van Orden, Mathew Ingram, Scott Bourne & Donna Papacosta.
Took a while for me to wrap my head around tagging. At first, I likened tagging to the game we all played when we were younger. Someone touches you then says “You’re it.” In the sense of my post above, this analogy rings true.
However, in a broader sense, tagging is kind of like a classification system. Sorta like when you go to the library and books are grouped into an (antiquated) category and numbering system. When someone blogs or podcasts, they will choose keywords to tag their post. This tagging allows others to see all the blog posts in that grouping.
Does that make sense? Anyone else want to contribute? You can also check out wikipedia’s definition – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tag_%28metadata%29
Hey Leesa,
I got a sence of what memeing is from the wiki link, but what is tagging?