As the browser is by far my most used app, I find that bookmarking the current tab and describing the task with no more than a few words or even as little as a few chars, to be a good way to keep track of what things I need to do soon. For things I would get to later or whenever I feel like it, I’ll put them in Firefox’s “Boookmarks Menu” or “Other Bookmarks” folders, and have lots of folders consisting of Reddit posts and searches about different topics.
Hello, from next time please try and include commentary on a feature/aspect/application on Linux that forms the basis for your post. I won’t delete/lock it but since this is a linux community, I would like to see posts a little more biased towards *nix instead of being perfectly agnostic.
I tend to be fairly laid back in my management of communities but I’m sure we agree that we’d like to see posts mention *nix-specific paradigms if possible on a linux community page.
Thanks
I don’t think that XKCD applies here, browser bookmark features rarely change.
Better than using tabs as bookmarks
I don’t know why you’re asking this productivity question on Linux and Firefox communities instead of on productivity communities.
Now I got downvotes in all three productivity communities I posted on:
No, but it’s not a bad idea.
you should try the desktop sticky note thing in kde
I do. I have a daily folder, weekly and reread, apart from the usual categories for long-term storage. “daily” gets the current stuff, “weekly” gets opened once a week, and “reread” is for stuff I read but didn’t really absorb. thanks to firefox sync I can read all of that form tablet or desktop or whatever.
stole it from Cory Doctorow: https://pluralistic.net/2024/01/25/today-in-tabs/
in the morning I middle-click on “daily” and it opens em all up - lemmy, mastodon, weather, stuff I’d like to buy, etc. and you go through them; got way easier with the new vertical bar + middle click for close the ones you done with.
Yeah sort of. I have a “to-read” folder of anything I’ve been meaning to read (believe it or not, it constantly grows and rarely shrinks…) and I use my top-level bookmarks bar for stuff to look at, usually cool FOSS projects I stumble across and want to try out. I don’t use it the exact way you talk about though, eg I usually don’t edit the bookmark name but the webpage title is usually descriptive enough for me.
I do that with the TabStash extension, which just uses bookmarks in the background so technically yes
only if i plan to do it in like, 3 months