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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source: https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/23274055\/raindrop-best-bookmarking-app<\/a> Bookmarking apps are a lost art. They were once a hot industry, where Delicious and Diigo and Wink and Furl (these are all real names, I swear!) competed to be the home for all your URLs. But those went out of style right around the time James Blunt\u2019s \u201cYou\u2019re Beautiful\u201d dropped off the radio charts, and the whole idea of \u201cbookmarks\u201d never really came back in style. You have browser bookmarks; what else do you need?<\/p>\n Here\u2019s why you should be using a bookmarking app: because it\u2019s the storage unit the internet needs. Seriously, think of it like you rented one of those self-storage squares, and now you have a place for all of the stuff that doesn\u2019t fit anywhere else. Instead of emailing yourself links or keeping 100 tabs open just in case, every time you come across a URL you might need, fire it into your bookmarking app. Tweet you want to send to somebody later? Bookmarked. Reddit thread you don\u2019t have time to wade through yet? Bookmarked. Recipe to try someday? Bookmarked. Confirmation page for your car rental next week? Bookmarked. Don\u2019t worry about what it is or where it\u2019ll eventually end up \u2014 just pour it all in one place and know it\u2019ll be there waiting for you.<\/p>\n I\u2019ve tried most bookmarking services in my traipsing about the internet, which honestly isn\u2019t saying much; there\u2019s not much competition out there. But at least there\u2019s Raindrop<\/a>, which turns out to suit my needs almost perfectly. It\u2019s available practically everywhere \u2014 web, Windows, Mac, Linux, iPad, iPhone, and Android \u2014 and it\u2019s fast and simple to understand. You get most basic features for free, but for $28 a year (about $2.33 a month), you get things like full-text search of everything you save, a permanent copy of everything even if the page disappeared, and a bunch of handy organizational tools. The search alone is worth it for me, but Raindrop does its job really well for free. If you use an app like Alfred<\/a> or Raycast<\/a>, you can also use those tools to search your Raindrop bookmarks. It\u2019s like an app launcher for web apps, and it\u2019s super useful. <\/p>\n The most important thing Raindrop gets right is its saving process. It has extensions for most popular browsers, and when you install the extension, you get to choose what happens when you click on it: it can either open up a mini version of the Raindrop app or, if you pick \u201cClipper,\u201d it\u2019ll just instantly save whatever page you\u2019re currently looking at. I recommend choosing the Clipper option and then setting up a keyboard shortcut to activate it \u2014 I have Cmd-Shift-B \u2014 so you can save any page without even picking your fingers up off your keyboard.<\/p>\n One of the app\u2019s most recent features is highlights, which let you save a snippet of a webpage or text instead of grabbing the whole thing. (The developer behind the app is also working on using screenshots the same way.) It makes Raindrop really handy for research; just highlight the two sentences you want to get back to, right-click, and hit \u201cSave highlights.\u201d<\/p>\n
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