Full text annotations onenote diigo8/17/2023 But this is just the starting point for what Histre intends to do. In short, when you have to look at a bunch of links for something (decide on your next vacation - after this virus is behind us of course, people to hire, material for your next blog post, etc) Histre makes your life easier. And it easy to group notes into notebooks and share with teams. For example, it removes friction in taking notes on links you're looking at, with free-form tags that you don't have to create first and other such niceties that add up. It aids the casual online research we all do (ie the explore -> filter -> decide loop). Histre aims to help with the whole "knowledge funnel", if you will. The idea is that we throw away a lot of the signal we generate while doing things online and this can be put to good use for ourselves. I'm not completely happy with how the learn directory works out - it kinda fragments the structure of my notes. So for example, I've been going through elixir recently: I have a folder at learn/elixir/workbook/getting-started for going through this: Workbook is where I store notes and code related to going through longer tutorials or books. That is organized primarily by tech, then has folders such as "examples", "basics", and "workbook". This is where any notes or learning based activities that requires source files goes. I also have a comprehensive "learn" directory that lives outside my notes folder. Things get tagged here too, so if I feel like learning something about elixir, I can just look in for a TODO tagged elixir. I don't really move stuff out of it though - I just mark it as done when I do it. I have an file which is where I add a TODO for anything I might want to do, such as 'read this article in the future'. This is what I use as a scratchpad for work and personal dev respectively. I also maintain a couple "log" files, called and. I periodically review recent notes and pull out the especially useful data into more synthesized files, such as. These notes are unsynthesized but tagged by content (e.g. This is where I put downloads (videos/etc) and notes on that content. I have a raw.org file and a notes/raw directory. It's actually why I started using emacs (spacemacs specifically). I also remember making multiple RSS feeds for DB categories for use in third party sites. I'm sure there are tons of ways to do this now. The cool thing about links kept in a blog with categories assigned is just as you said-you can start microblogs really easily and this was always a strength of Textpattern: Lightweight software that supported multiple blogs out of the box, just go create a new "section" and you're off and running. I find that I do go back more often to: Music I liked, blogs or sites that were well-designed, Project Gutenberg books I liked, and Wikipedia articles I enjoyed. I'm considering exporting my DB for this purpose as well. Then I use grep or silver searcher or Catfish to look them up. I still update that DB but most commonly keep links in text files now, either journal files or files for specific topics. The entries are descriptive so they're pretty easy to search up anyway. If I have the time and interest to fix a single link or even a batch, I'm pretty lucky. It's up to something like 3000 links now? Anyway I also get people pointing out dead links of _their own_ because they changed domains or whatever.but really, 99% of those are links in which I've lost interest anyway. I even write postings for my own amusement įunny about the SEO emails. If it was aimed to create an audience I would have to endlessly explain to what extend I believe the claims. The largest one has a ton of people making claims that seem to good to be true. Why should I even care? I find everything onthere fascinating. I arrived at this formula trying to build an audience for my blogs both high and low effort postings did nothing. Google search banned one of my blogs one time, probably because it had to many links or a lot of links to unpopular pages. Not a week goes by without an email from someone looking to do SEO on my bookmarks. Host your own if its not a big deal for you. A private/invitation only blogger blog honestly will do just fine. Real traffic is even undesirable since it requires comment moderation. Enable comments if you like but don't make an effort for others. If you want to be really meta about it you start blogs about separate topics. You select a bit of text on a web page, click the blogthis button and POOF a wonderful formatted post with a block quote in an editor comes up. You use a blog! Use a blogthis bookmarklet/extension. I found the perfect answer to this question, in a way its comical.
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