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dvdgsng | 4 years ago
Bookmarks are such a convenient and intuitive way to organize, I'm still baffled how few people actually use them. They exist like forever (1993 according to Wiki), yet there is always someone asking for links to sites/files/Tools/apps they use basically daily.
have_faith|4 years ago
Despite bookmarking websites I find interesting occasionally I almost never visit a site from bookmarks. I don't remember if I bookmarked something, I forget what something was called, I expect I didn't file it in a folder that makes any sense etc. I really want to love bookmarks but like so many people I just find myself not using them for various reasons.
All browsers give very little thought to the UX of bookmarks and what users need of them. It seems to have boiled down to developers thinking that because bookmarks are technically a nested data structure of folders and links that all they need to do is give the ability for the user to manually manage this tree structure and call it a day. I think there's a wealth of missed opportunity with bookmarks but this comment would get very long if I carried on babbling.
arantius|4 years ago
Bayart|4 years ago
tpm|4 years ago
- in most browsers when you type something in the url/search box it can search through your bookmarks too
- bookmark toolbars allow you to use bookmarks as a top-level or drop-down (folders on toolbar) menu
mattowen_uk|4 years ago
I have a personal Web based Bookmarks app, that I have self hosted for years, but even now I hardly revisit it unless I'm really stuck and a Google search can't find the site/page I need. It's got 1,000s of bookmarks in it, and I dread to think how many no longer work.
tinus_hn|4 years ago
ezconnect|4 years ago
spideymans|4 years ago
chillfox|4 years ago
wtetzner|4 years ago
cseleborg|4 years ago
For example when I do my bookkeeping, I can open the finance app, an instructions Google Doc, a spreadsheet for recording stuff that's causing me problems and 1-2 more pages I need in that context literally with one click of my mouse's wheel button (yeah, I'm a mouse person).
Same for when I process my inboxes, GTD-style: with one click, I open Gmail, my calendar, a picture of my notebook, a picture of the spot where I keep paper documents, the Facebook Leads Center etc, and then I just process each tab one by one in order.
simonh|4 years ago
It would be nice to be able to sync between Safari and Chrome, and I'm sure there are extensions for that, but it's not too much of an issue.
dredmorbius|4 years ago
On Chrome, they're little more than an intentional history, with no ability to spatially organise or annotate them. Sometimes Chrome will utilise bookmarks as a type-ahead autocomplete resource, sometimes not. It mostly favours browser history, which may be useful but often is not.
On Fennec Fox, there's a vestigal organisation available (folders), as well as the ability to add descriptive text (but not specifically tags). There's no ability to re-order links within folders, or folders within the overall hierarchy.
On both, text input is so painful that any real organisation is all but impossible.
The tool that I tend to find most useful these days is the old-school "bookmarks page" --- a manually edited listing of sites that I've organised into some ad hoc folksonomy that suits my use at the time.
Desktop and console browsers are still more useful. Firefox has a hierarchical listing that I find useful, and will still occasionally use. w3m effectively creates a hierarchical page I can then further edit and navigate. I actually use that as the basis of some of my freestanding edited bookmarks pages.
tinus_hn|4 years ago
The problem here is that there are too many barely working crutches.
kortex|4 years ago
I guess session savers? Never really got into them because (at the time a few years back) they weren't great for indexing within pages. Might give it a try again.
skytreader|4 years ago
I've replaced the functionality with various tools and tricks, from Google Reader to, nowadays, a simple dump list in Evernote with a loose tagging system. I guess now that you can sync bookmarks with Chrome and Google Account my original problem is solved but that solution came too late and old habits die hard (not to mention private data concerns).
I did take to bookmarking again lately though but mostly for work purposes: obscure pages in our wiki, some internal systems, the system we use to book leaves, etc. But if I have to change my work computer I would definitely have to ask around for those URLs again.
[1] Funny how using this term really dates my actions.
NavinF|4 years ago
You can set a sync password to encrypt all chrome sync data before uploading it to Google. This will prevent sites like https://passwords.google.com from working because Google can't see your data.
photojosh|4 years ago
emodendroket|4 years ago