Based on the title I thought this was a personal call-out to me and others like me who obsessively bookmark/save links and yet seldom even glance at their collection.
I keep thinking about something like a search engine integration that would suggest relevant bookmarks at the top of your search results. It might have been even cooler back when we had things like delicio.us and if we could have gotten recommended relevant links from people we followed's bookmarks too. But even knowing how to code like I do I sorta can't think of how to do it, maybe a browser extension that injects over google? I guess I've more thought about how it would interact than how to actually make it.
This is (tragically) the reason why I remain a tab hoarder: the UI carries an implicit nudge (a costly signal of visual real estate), for my future self to engage with it.
In a similar spirit to OP: it did help mitigate the hoarding, when I began thinking "how hard is it to find this resource/reference again, should I actually need it?". And if it's trivial to google (and mnemonically sticky enough I can trust my future self to remember it), I can close the tab.
This is interesting. I took the opposite path. I used to remember page numbers while reading books, just so I could come back without getting lost. That habit started in the School library. These days, I bought a simple, cheap, paintable bookmark, about 100 of them, which my daughters can paint. I have them lying around in books, as I tend to read multiple books at a time. My daughters keep painting them with whatever they want, from anime to their favorite characters, to just about anything. So, bookmarks for me everywhere. Sometimes, I tend to go back a few pages just to recollect the books I was reading a while ago.
I don't use phones, so if I have to go somewhere, I have to memorise the route. I enjoy the exercise. I look up the directions on my laptop, mentally rehearse the points of interest that will indicate to me where I need to take particular turns, and then have to put into practice my memory with the actual physical landscape I tour as I follow this route. Sometimes I make mistakes, but correcting them is part of the exercise.
It seems very few people nowadays know how to follow a route, especially an unfamiliar one, without being tethered to their GPS.
In my personal experience, when I take a wrong turn, it's impossible to find my way back.
I understand if you're describing the route from one large city to another, but if you need to get to a specific street in even a medium-sized city, it's impossible to remember every turn the first time around.
how old are you? How can you memorize a new route?
Because i am born in the TomTom era and i had google maps on my first phone ( not smartphone ) but it have it
I can generally re-find my place in books, but years ago I acquired a stack of orange punch cards from a university library that they were giving away as scrap paper. These make great bookmarks and also interesting historical conversation pieces if someone notices/recognizes them.
I think the previous use for the punchards to have one for each book and scan them on checkout/checkin (maybe this predated barcodes?)
Very nice piece of text. For me it’s the fact that the book is always there and no amount of pages can be too much for me to gather something from rereading a part of the book that leads to where I left off. In a way I think we’re also past the point of bookmarking anything in our lives. Culture after all is just the reinforcement of the same idea.
FireInsight|1 day ago
michaelbrave|15 hours ago
lukifer|1 day ago
In a similar spirit to OP: it did help mitigate the hoarding, when I began thinking "how hard is it to find this resource/reference again, should I actually need it?". And if it's trivial to google (and mnemonically sticky enough I can trust my future self to remember it), I can close the tab.
celurian92|1 day ago
Brajeshwar|1 day ago
xtiansimon|8 hours ago
Big fan of marginalia myself.
wonger_|1 day ago
jordigh|1 day ago
It seems very few people nowadays know how to follow a route, especially an unfamiliar one, without being tethered to their GPS.
alienpingu|1 day ago
how old are you? How can you memorize a new route?
Because i am born in the TomTom era and i had google maps on my first phone ( not smartphone ) but it have it
zdw|1 day ago
I think the previous use for the punchards to have one for each book and scan them on checkout/checkin (maybe this predated barcodes?)
AreShoesFeet000|1 day ago
nicbou|19 hours ago
BloondAndDoom|1 day ago
ADHD fish memory doesn't help either.
apitman|1 day ago
pflenker|1 day ago