I was setting up something on my daughter's laptop last weekend when I made a startling discovery. For context, she will graduate this year with a degree in Computer Science and Computer Engineering. When I added a URL to the Bookmarks in her browser, I noticed that it was the only thing in her Bookmarks. When I asked her why she didn't have any sites Bookmarked she said she keeps tabs open for everything she uses regularly (Gmail, Blackboard, and a few other things). I didn't know how to process this information. I guess she uses phone apps for just about everything and on the rare occasion that she needs to use a web site for something she finds it with Google.I don't know if she is typical for people her age, but for her the answer to your question would be "none".
082349872349872|3 years ago
(it may not really be any less Skinner-boxy, but it sure feels less like it)
[Edit: to the original ask, I try to spend my net time in active browsing mode, pulling content according to my interests du jour, rather than letting it be pushed to me — another reason that batching the "push" content has been satisfying]
[Edit2: where do things live that I "might read someday"? Mostly in my browser history. A few in external files, depending upon whether I think someday is realistic enough to be worth backing up.]
BrotherBisquick|3 years ago
version_five|3 years ago
Psyladine|3 years ago
Mostly to keep up a digital backlog to rival the stack of books next to my desk.
Occasionally for reference in searching as they're sorted by topic and google search has steadily become wrestling with the algorithm for relevant results.
roarcher|3 years ago
My problem now is that I have so many bookmarks that it's becoming easier to re-Google the topic than to find that bookmark I swear I made 3 months ago...if only I could restrict a search engine to just my bookmarks...
RjQoLCOSwiIKfpm|3 years ago
RjQoLCOSwiIKfpm|3 years ago
But first, I must process the thousands of bookmarks of the years in between.
I'll do that after I cleaned up my dozens of "Desktop" directories.