vote up 8 vote down star
4

Reading up on some of the answers to another question I found a tip about a book I wanted to take a closer look at. The provided link goes to amazon.com, but for historical reasons I have my wish lists at amazon.co.uk. I have quite a few titles on my various lists, so I prefer to add all new books to the same site, making it easier to keep track of what I plan to buy. However, sometimes I will find a book that is not available on the UK site, so I have to maintain a separate list on the US site anyway.

I would like to have my book lists on a different site, ideally stored alongside other resources I want to keep track of. So far I have come up with the following types of information that I need to organize:

  • Books I plan on buying or researching further.
  • Events, courses and conferences I plan to attend or find out more about
  • Articles I want to read or keep for future reference.
  • Various URLs.
  • Movies I want to see (i.e. IMDB links).
  • Music (albums, songs) I want to check out.
  • Various thoughts, notes and ideas (possibly related to a current or future project)

Today I use a combination of browser bookmarks, Evernote notes, Amazon wish lists, blog drafts and files stored on JungleDisk drives too keep track of all this information. If something is specific to a given project, I will store the information in the project's Subversion repository.

Common for all these types of information is that many of them would benefit from some integration with a third-party provider (i.e. links to book information on Amazon, links to music/band information on allmusic.com or Wikipedia, links to movie reviews on IMDB, etc.). I would also like to be able to organize everything in one place, ideally with tags and folders.

I know I can make everything into links and organize them on delicious or make everything into notes and put them on Evernote, but maybe there exists a better site with direct support for many of these information types already?

How do people here organize their (online) resources, notes and ideas?

Note: Some of you may wonder what this has to do with programming, but since programming is a natural part of my everyday life, I don't really see any significant difference between organizing articles on functional programming or reviews of the latest Batman movie. I would still like to have it all accessible—and searchable—in one place.

Also note that I'm not looking for yet another social bookmarking web site. I only need the information to be accessible to me, and sharing them with other people or adding friends on the site is of no importance. I guess a desktop application would do the job, but a web site would be more convenient to access from anywhere.

flag

16 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

how about set up your own private wiki? edit: Tada - 15 productive tips for using a wiki!

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Have you looked at Google Bookmark and Google Notebook? That's what I use. Note that bookmarks also appear in the notebook, but that interaction isn't what you would expect (as the bookmarks have to stay in the "unfiled" notebook or they become inaccessable through Google Bookmark). Both also have a firefox plugin - the bookmark allows you to add a menu bar item to access your bookmarks and notebook lets you "clip" pages.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I use foxmarks for my bookmarks - it's just for me, not the world, accessable anywhere, with or without firefox.
however as for other notes, i haven't got a likeable solution apart from using unpublished posts on a blog
maybe someone shoud write one... I wonder where we could find a programmer ;)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I use Evernote. The best part is the mobile integration.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I use Todoist for my information storage. Although primarily a "to-do" list site (which I also use it for), it powerful enough for me to be able to store anything else there and catogorize it accordinly using projects and the various plugins.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I use Microsoft OneNote. Whilst it's great on a Tablet PC (why won't someone make a good tablet??), it's still just as useful on a normal PC / PDA!

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I currently use Del.icio.us as I like to have my bookmarks available at home, at work and where ever else I happen to be. There have been moments during pair programming where I've browsed my bookmarks from a colleagues PC to find an article I'd tagged which discussed a problem we were looking it. There is also a browser addon for Del.icio.us which allows you to search your bookmarks from within the browser and I find the ability to apply multiple tags to a single entry very useful.

I have only just started using Google Notebook, and I didn't know there was a Google bookmarks, but I shall be looking into that.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

This is really an interesting problem. There is no single solution to solve it all :) Atleast as far as i know. Hope to get some nice stuff from here..

Google bookmarks is quite good. But i feel

the good

  • It works fine only for anything with URLs :)

the bad

  • The more labels you have, the more difficult it will be to manage
  • Can have only one level of hierarchy.

I used Idea Library on my Windows Mobile phone for sometime. It does some interesting things like you can add Voice based idea ;) and sketch based idea, etc.. You might want to check.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

For bookmarks del.icio.us combined with the del.icio.us toolbar is invaluable. You can tag the bookmarks and use filters to only show the ones relevant to a certain project. You can also append notes to the bookmarks if you need more context than the tags can provide.

At the moment I'm testing out Goodreads for sorting out my book problem. It has, as far as I know, every book from Amazon and you can add your own. You can assign states to each book (to read, currently reading etc). It seems like a good solution but haven't tried it enough to say it covers your needs.

FriendFeed or SecondBrain could solve some of the "there is no site to rule them all" problem. They are technically "social bookmarking sites" but you don't have to use them that way.

link|flag
vote up 6 vote down

All my bookmarks are on del.icio.us. I use it to also keep track of books, articles, movies and music that I wish to read/watch/listen in the future. All stuff I intend to do is tagged with TODO and depending on the media tagged with additional READ, WATCH and LISTEN tags.

So, it becomes painless to bring up stuff I want to read, for example:

<http://del.icio.us/myname/TODO+READ>

Stuff to watch:

<http://del.icio.us/myname/TODO+WATCH>

And after I'm done with them, I just remove the TODO tag.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Give a look also to Zotero, a good ffox plugin.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I use Furl as a bookmarking service.

There are 2 things that I really like about it:

  1. the fact that it stores a cached copy of every bookmarked page so even if the page is deleted or moved I can still access it,
  2. the search feature that searches not only within bookmark title or clipping but also within the cached copy.
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Foxmarks, and a Sticky Note app for iGoogle that just lets me put whatever text information that I want to store in one place.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Thank you all for the suggestions. As I suspected, there is no "one site to rule them all"—at least not yet, so I settled with Evernote and Delicious for now. My books are still at Amazon though...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I second Google Notebook, its a great way to organize lots of data and leave comments/notes to yourself. Also easy to share certain notebooks with friends or public.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

You can use special portable program (not online manager) for organization, synchronization and verifying bookmarks. For example, very interesting program: LinkCollector Portable Edition for IE, Firefox and Opera

Screenshot: alt text

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.