Cristina Bunea

The old as time debate: how do you save content for later?

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There are so many tools out there, but what have you found to work best? And by that I mean, what actually gets you to consume the content or minimize the clutter? Is it actually a problem? Do you actually think you'll get to it at some point or is it more about having peace of mind that you don't lose what you're saving?
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Wiktoria Jaszcza
The only thing that works for me so far is youtube watch later. Articles do not have their place :)
Philipp Stelzel
On Youtube I save for later, articles I save with Instapaper.
Dawn Veltri
Very inefficiently. I have Google Docs labeled with a topic where I save links relating to that topic. It is the only thing I have found that works for me.
Emmanuel Lefort
Weavit! Eating my own cooking :)
Sean Song
1. I use Obsidian to take notes. 2. Important URL for reading later I just Email myself. (so old school)
Adnyesh Dalpati
Use Diigo - Highly recommend The best tool i have seen, whatever you read on web can be highlighted, bookmarked, commented. This can be used for future reference, you can search and whoaa you find what you have done before. https://chrome.google.com/websto...
Quinn Nguyen
This is also a very frustrating issue for me. I usually open more than 30 tabs in my browser and afraid to close them because I think I can get through them all in one day. I never quite did it though. Couple years ago I used to have a folder on Google Drive where I kept all the links and online materials that I want to get back to -- and to be honest, after a while it was quite a mess. Now I'm using Google Keep to store all those links. If I think there's something very interesting or relevant to my current tasks, I'd pin it on Keep so that it stays up on the top of the tool.
Mahdi Barkhordari
Hey guys, I've just published a discussion. Would appreciate any feedback. https://www.producthunt.com/disc...