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Roma Zvarich2014-08-22 09:02:32
Data storage
Roma Zvarich, 2014-08-22 09:02:32

How do you store links to useful articles?

There are many useful articles on Habré and other sites. Not everyone is needed here and now. After reading, I want to leave to return in the future. Saving everything in Pocket or a similar lazy-read service is one day creating a garbage dump where you can't find anything yourself. Which articles have already been read, and which not. Tags are also not enough. I would like to put it into folders, maybe even with a double investment.
Advise how to act in such situations.

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12 answer(s)
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Roma Zvarich, 2014-08-28
@hisbvdis

Finally found a service with links to create folders - www.tabsbook.ru

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Kirill_0x7C4, 2014-08-22
@Kirill_0x7C4

I use Evernote. Very convenient: you can save the entire page, with pictures and design; you can save only the desired piece; you can just save the link. You can simply create notes like in a notepad. Well, and most importantly, all this goodness is synchronized between all the devices that you use: work and home computers, tablet, phone.

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Bogdan Gorbeshko, 2014-08-23
@bodqhrohro

I am using raindrop.io . There is one "but" - in the browser extension the hierarchy of categories is two-level, and in the official web interface for some reason it is one-level.

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Glomen, 2014-09-19
@Glomen

feedly I look through the feed, save it in the same place, then I look at the article on the tablet

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ranebull, 2014-08-22
@ranebull

Advise how to act in such situations.

Articles that I have not read usually leave open in the browser. When I get a chance, I go back and read it.
I dump the articles I read (links to them) into OneNote, so that in which case I can return and read the article again. OneNote has support for tags (you can also create your own tags).
This is how everything looks like:
30516b3234664abca32a166b6290b076.png

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web_xaser, 2014-08-22
@webxaser

Browser bookmarks.

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dude321, 2014-08-22
@dude321

Also bookmarks. But along the way, it's already time to move on to something else: while the bookmarks in the list are scrolling to the very last one, I have time to drink a cup of coffee.

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Pavel Volintsev, 2014-08-23
@copist

I must be original.
I use the todoist app - it's cross-platform, fancy and very convenient todo-list.
Why exactly him?
Because at a certain point in time, I realized that if I didn’t write some interesting bookmark in my bookmarks, I would never go to this page again.
Periodically I look through the books and set a date for the reading. After reading it, I don’t delete it from todo so that I can find it again later, but I mark it with checkboxes and tags.
And I use the search for tasks, tags, flags - it's more convenient than poking around in the browser bookmarks.
screenshot : take.ms/t3cOB

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ALLIGATOR, 2014-08-23
@ALLIGATOR

After the death of Opera, I switched to Firefox, I keep it in my bookmarks.
We really miss the convenient search in Firefox bookmarks, as it was in Opera.

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ceban, 2014-08-25
@ceban

Peeep.us

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Daniel, 2014-08-28
@Dani_el

I put articles in Pocket, I bookmark other links in Chrome with an early version of Google Stars .

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Maxim Karakulov, 2014-09-15
@karaboz

At one time, delicious.com was a very popular link storage service . The service allowed each saved link to be tagged. The tags themselves could be ordered using a two-level hierarchy. True, at some point I stopped using this service, but I didn’t switch to any other - I just stopped saving links (=

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