This nasty habit has accrued 10k+ of bookmarks/pocketed articles/saved threads. I'll never get around to reading them all but I have a ton of anxiety of removing them. I feel like a digital hoarder.
Any advice on how to set me down a path to change this habit?
If you're concerned about the time you spend scanning through HN and creating the bookmarks in the first place, what you should do is replace that activity with something else. Concrete example: I decided to eat less junk food, and the way I did it was by filling the fridge with healthy foods which I could eat whenever I got the urge for a snack. It's much easier to replace than abstain.
Considering that it seems that quite a few other people have the same problem, perhaps it's an idea for those of us who feel troubled about our 'digital hoarding' to collectively try and detox (at least for a while to see how it feels)? Perhaps a 'Junkless July' and a follow-up Ask HN at the end of that?
I totally agree on the digital hoarding. Just so happens that my mum is a physical hoarder - and that is much worse than a digital one.
I have 10872 links inside pinboard.
I think there is a big connection between my timewasting and wanting to hoard links.
I've managed to trim down any other bookmarking applications so that I just have pinboard. I'd highly recommend this, pinboard is beautifully simple and keeps very focussed on doing nothing but bookmarking. So that at least you don't waste any more time than just bookmarking.
Most people here seem to advise about ways of making it easier to bookmark things.
I however have tried to make it harder for myself to bookmark things. I've deleted all the shortcuts / browser plugins that I had to quickly save and tag things. So the only way to add URLs is to do it by going to pinboard itself and manually typing in the URL and title plus tags.
It's a small hurdle but it does slow the flow.
Edit: this got my bookmarking down from 5-20 a day to 2-3 a day.
Now I just need to find my local bookmarking anonymous meeting.
It's purely there so that if I have a problem and I vaguely remember that I came across a solution that there's half a chance I can search for it in my bookmarks and find it.
It does serve a use on occasion - I typically star a bookmark that I came back to.
I've starred 74 out of the 10000 bookmarks that I've got. But I've been bookmarking for 10 years and only 'starring' things for about a year.
So ~7% (74 / 1000) I come back to.
I find it also important to maintain a wont-do list of things that are not important to me (and I thought they were).
Ex: I thought running marathon was important to me. Turns of semi-regular to gym is what is important to me. So any link/article related to marathon, extreme workouts/fitness that I come across is glanced and closed peacefully.
I think this will help you let go bulk of links without causing anxiety. HTH.
[1] http://gettingthingsdone.com/2011/01/the-6-horizons-of-focus
I keep a lot of personal information organized. I go thru bookmarks about once a week and move them to text notes. Something I want to learn? It goes into an anki flash card. General reference? Goes into my markdown notes, or I might edit the appropriate Wikipedia aricle instead. Helpful for a side project? Toss it the project readme for later.
I also use something like Trello (zenkit) to keep a long list of "maybe never" projects where I can toss cool stuff I'll probably never get into. These may be organized as well, so if I see something cool about say, game programming in C, I can toss it into the existing maybe never game coding project note.
Also, if I have unread bookmarks that can be understood/used without coding, I read them on the go with my phone as much as possible.
If it is something you need now, email yourself that article [1], send it to your kindle [2] or save it to a separate board on Trello. Delete it once you are done with it.
For the second case, use an app like Pocket or Instapaper [3].
Here is the search engine : https://learn-anything.xyz/
Can I use it personally/privately already?
Can I selfhost it?
Can you make it available on GitHub?
Can you make the CTA-Button (call-to-action) more visible? I haven't edited links, but would you consider making editing/moderation similar/better than wikipedia?
What about import/export, that would be a killer feature and allow you to keep your site closed-source, but make FOSS clients that asynchronously add/receive benefit.
Try marketing at more visibly at http://alternativeto.net/software/pearltrees/
Mainstay:
[Use Chrome Extensions (or similar add-ons/apps in alternative browsers)]
0.) Search Bookmarks (Enables searching your bookmarks from Omnibox; type b-m-space in your omni and then term(s)/keyword(s) for the bookmark(s) you are searching for... they will appear in the suggestion drop-down... or, press return to search bookmarks using Chrome Bookmark Search, which will match the term(s) you've entered): https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/search-bookmarks/m...
Two other worthwhile mentionables:
1.) Bookmark My Tabs: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/bookmark-my-tabs/d...
2.) OneTab: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/onetab/chphlpgkkbo...
I use Firefox and the "PlainOldFavorites" add-on. This means each bookmark is created as an individual .url file in the Favorites folder. Once a week or so I go through it and delete or move each .url file to the most appropriate folder in my personal library of topics. i.e. If I bookmark something about a new kind of map projection it goes in the ref/cartography folder. This folder can contain any kind of file from any source (i.e. saved html, epubs, software, csv files etc etc). If I want to know something about cartography, I look in my own library first as it's typically focused on resources I value most. I also have folders called "must read today/this week/this month/this year"
I easily have 10,000's of urls filed away like this. This also has the bonus of being private, backup-able, offline and with no external dependencies.
I posit that any sizeable (personal scale) media storage system that separates media by type is obsolete with digital media. A separate system for bookmarks, file-typeA, file-typeB, etc means you have to search multiple isolated db's for each search.
Notes
Post XP, Windows handling of the .url file association is a dumpster fire. Just drag n drop the .url file directly onto a Firefox window to open it.
You can easily change the location of the default Favorites folder if desired.
If it's just a static document at the url, save it as html before link rot finally gets it.
Don't do it (as it saves a lot of files - js, css, images, besides some of those could have malicious code...). Just pdf-print it in Chromium and bookmark that pdf in FF with the same tags.
It's okay that you won't ever return to them. Because one day you'll want to retrieve a specific one and then you're better off with an excess of bookmarks among which what you were looking for, than having an organised list but without what you're searching.
If you are spending toi much time chasing new links on reddit, what works for me is to limit my sources (hn and reddit only for me) and sometimes to have an offline week, proving myself that I can live without being on the top of everything.
If you're anything like me, then your problem isn't so much that you're a hoarder. It's that your input / output is extremely imbalanced.
You have this feeling of "man, but that article is probably really good...I don't want to miss out", but then you never read it in the end because you put it on the back burner.
Lately (for the past couple of months) I give myself about a day to read the content I bookmark. If I "can't make the time" for it, then it must not be important enough so it gets deleted.
This input / output imbalance is probably due to not taking enough action. If you're working on XYZ project, and you find a blog post that relates to it, then it's a no brainer to read the blog post as soon as possible so you can apply what you learn.
If you have nothing to output, then you have little reason to read the things you bookmark. Tech moves too fast to bookmark everything. The only time I would really bookmark a tech post for later is when the content tackles a really hard problem, or it's timeless advice.
Btw I use Google Keep to organize bookmarks and it helps a lot because you can tag and archive them. It's very helpful for making sense out of a large number of bookmarks, and lets you archive them after reading them, so you don't lose the URL in the end.
Also, in your case I wouldn't spend time organizing your bookmarks. That is just busy work preventing you from getting real stuff done.
So, the habit change is to ask yourself why you're bookmarking so much. Once you can identify the problem, then the solution is usually pretty easy. Hey, what do you know, life is almost like programming!
My advice: Delete it all. If you need it bad enough, you'll find it again. It's digital.
With 10K+ bookmarks you'll never organise it.
An alternative (but imo too hard with 10K+) use some kind of hoarding 'zen' approach - look at the link - if it brings you an emotional response - keep, else delete.
Instead, I'm looking to leverage these bookmarks as a custom knowledge base. My current thinking is to just build a search app with a database from my bookmarks (i use pocket and its search is decent but not great), which lets me retrieve articles based on context and lets me take notes against articles.
Think of it as a cross-indexed commonplace book, but not tied down to folder hierarchies.
Evernote doesn't work for me cause I obsess over folder hierarchies to the point where its OCD. Search is what works for me.
I use Pinboard and have 6.5k links saved. I bookmark things not to come back to them, but so I can get them out of my browser and off my mind. I tag things as they go in (the auto-suggested tags make this fast), and I don't stress about whether I'll ever look at them again. Then if later I find I do want them, they're just a quick search away. And indeed, I do come back and dig things out with some frequency.
(This is a piece of the GTD mindset, but since it's digital it's effectively free--no file cabinet full of folders you have to sort through.)
Then if I ever came back to them, then I would mark them as read and star them.
However I found this doesn't really cure the addiction (I still would endlessly go searching and bookmarking articles.), but it did help and got me less precious about dumping an article.
So I think you do have to go through this stage.
Hoever now, I'm simply trying to make it harder for myself to bookmark (only manually via the 'add URL' link in pinboard), so I now end up only bookmarking about 1 in 3 of the articles I open. I'm less concerned about just closing the tab.
Alternatively, for articles and content that looks interesting and I want to read, I'm using Pocket on my browser, phone and tablet. Everything I want to read gets saved to Pocket. When I find myself with 15 minutes and looking for something to do, I pull out Pocket, read an article or two and delete them. I do fear that I'll never get through the entire Pocket list though. Maybe I need to take some more long flights to get through this backlog. Pocket is just a different method of digital hoarding though.
I'm not a fan of saving 1000s of bookmarks because that's not really building a collection that I'll consume. I see some people constantly opening new browser tabs with the intent of coming back to read it, which is really just a more ephemeral version of the bookmarking solution.
I used to spend a lot of time organizing and metadataing my bookmarks - this was back in the day when I used Opera, which had better bookmarking capabilities than Chrome - but stopped once I realized I never clicked on most bookmarks and that I was just wasting time and causing myself anxiety because I had hundreds of links that I was supposed to explore in my todo folder.
Today I just use Chrome's built-in bookmark manager to handle 50-100 bookmark across three folders:
* "tools", "articles": these are references that I use frequently enough that I want to be able to find them through the address bar. I almost never bookmark articles because I know that I can always find stuff thru google (I have maybe only 20 articles bookmarked). Also, Chrome's internal search engine is so mediocre that it often fails to find bookmarked articles so why bother in the first place. It really helps me to remember that content curation on the web is so fine grained and available for the most specialized topics that I know I can get high quality links collections on any topic imaginable because even my very specific problems, questions and curiosities are shared by millions of people.
* "todo": this is just a collection of articles, clips, movies and music that I couldn't fully explore in a minute or two when I first stumbled upon the link. If a bookmark has been in this folder for more than a few weeks, I just delete it. Truly good content tends to be shared and re-shared by millions of people so nothing worthwhile disappears on the web.
One way to think of this is that being a "digital hoarder" is way less destructive than being a physical one. Digital storage is cheap these days. You don't need to remove any bookmarks (or "saved articles" as Pocket calls them), since they'll just be "old articles at the back of the queue, which may be interesting to browse sometime in the future, but if I'm not interested I'll just ignore them and look at the front of the queue instead, since the stuff I've saved recently more likely lines up with my current interests."
Pocket also suggests recommended articles for you to read (which I suppose could just add more stress to your system) but I've often found their recommendation algorithm to be pretty good.
I had accumulated over a thousand bookmarks and was having trouble deleting them. "I want to learn {subject} some day, so cannot lose this article". Related was the issue of not able to close my browser because I easily can have 30+ tabs open at the same time. Again the same fear, don't want to lose track of that new article on ML.
Something that helped me relieve the pain a lot was to start using OneTab extension for Chrome. OneTab allows me to close tabs without feeling guilty. OneTab keeps track of the links so that I have a way of getting them back if required, and at the same time - it removed the necessity for me to bookmark them individually and organising them and obsessing over them.
So in the end, I still keep the links around in OneTab, but I have found that it is much better for my stress levels that having to hoard the links in my main (chrome) bookmarks.
You have to set aside a block of time to go through them and categorize them and be honest: I have one lifetime. Will I ever really use this?
There is a threshhold on diversification of your focus, beyond which you will ruin any chance you ever had of accomplishing anything.
I started using a CLI bookmark manager called "buku" [0], storing the bookmarks database in a Dropbox folder to get multi-system sharing.
One nice feature is after running a search you get dropped into an interactive buku prompt where you can do further searches, open results in a browser, and edit entries.
My motivation for the switch was that I kept encountering issues (mostly performance) when using a high number of bookmarks maintained by the browser. And then there's the hassle of moving all of those bookmarks if I switch browsers again. It has been a positive experience overall.
Edit: not proud of it.
Or we could just stop. Let's just stop. Shall we stop? I don't think I can stop.
And as someone else said, link rot is a real issue. mostly alleviated for me by Archive.org + an extension. But actually saving the pages would be better.
You can save the whole article in Evernote. That makes it searchable.
Why is it significant? What did it make you think about or feel? How would you like to use it?
It is search platform, where you can get free full-text search engine for your resources.
You can upload resources without any limits and get access to your information with search. Now it's beta, in this month coming massive updates (migrate to React, autocomplete and so on...)
Chrome history and autocomplete are great, and as said before, links rots over time. My memory and Ctrl+H do the work.
I don't have a huge memory, but if I forgot something it is probably not very interesting.
Of course, sometimes, I forget some URL and I spend a little time searching in the history. But it is worth nothing compared to managing thousands of bookmarks.
Chrome looks so nice without the bookmark bar :-)
My suggestion will be to loosen up. Find some people you like to follow and read those articles only. Nothing is gained by worrying about "not knowing".
Evernote, on the other hand, provides a creative means: taking a note on your own way. By creating a Notebook and a Note, you can give a brief statement of the linked articles, which could come in useful for later full-text search.
-Bookmark only those sites which I regularly visit -Use the reading format for the articles I like to reread -Save them as PDF in the specific folder related to work -Delete those files which don't make sense anymore -Print the folder and read it when the need arises
That's why I stopped bookmarking and started notebooking. Evernote as a personal knowledgebase.
I also have thousands of bookmarks I rarely look into or use. BUT when I do go through them, I'm happy and find interesting stuff I'm glad I did go back through...so I'd say save away the great stuff, just like you save great photos.
image -> Pinterest
link -> TXT file (YAML notation) with lists of links according subject.
Periodically I delete some, however lists keep growing..
Actually my Firefox became super heavy and I didnt investigate yet why. The problem is not bokmarking but to have a browser that can handle it.
I put all my bookmarks into my shaarli instance, so it doesn't slow and clog chrome.
Only bookmarks I regularly need go into the chrome bookmarks.
80 points by agrocrag 19 hours ago | flag | hide | past | web | 62 comments | favorite | save to pocket
And, here's some alternatives: https://alternativeto.net/software/pocket/Other alternatives are:
- use browser-specific cloud sync across devices
- using OS tricks to move the bookmarks file to a cloud file service like iCloud, OneDrive, Google Drive, Box, Dropbox, SpiderOak, etc.