| I don't really have a centralised place where I store this stuff. I basically use the native facilities of whatever app I'm using. In Chrome, I frequently use auto-complete instead of bookmarks. I don't need to use deep links very often, just hit the front page and then sign in. In the event that I do want a deep link, I use a simple bookmark. I really don't need too many of them, but I do like my Bookmark Bar for quick and easy links to stuff. More so at work than personal accounts. I spend a lot of time in YouTube, and so I have a ton of playlists across two accounts. I have thousands of liked videos and a healthy history of viewed videos as well as searches. I have subscriptions for the best channels I watch all the time. So YouTube's organisation schemes are well-leveraged for me, in a way that can't be achieved with bookmarking or downloading locally. On Wikipedia, of course I use watchlists for stuff. I really should have some sort of calendar or TODO list, because there are a lot of tasks I abandon or forget after a short while. I am largely a reactive editor who follows up on other people editing an article with my own changes, or contributing to an active discussion. I used to use a chat bot that was able to watch for other editors' edits, but that facility was unfortunately discontinued. (Yes, it was a bit like stalking, but it is 100% acceptable to monitor and verify edits if we expect disruption; my usage was always in the best interest of the project.) I also use folders and favorites and stuff on Google Drive to organise, and if I need to jot an electronic note, I don't use Keep, I just use Docs. I have some offline Sheets and Docs that document general stuff about my life, for instance a grocery inventory and household measurements. I used to use Evernote and it was fantastic. I totally agree with the poster upthread who mentioned clipping ability with it. Evernote could totally bring your personal knowledge all together in one place, with offline capabilities. In fact, I briefly, fearlessly, used Evernote as a rudimentary account/password manager before I got a real app that encrypted the stuff! |