| Bookmarks on mobile are an utter clusterfuck. 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. |