A bookmarking dilemma
All of the information we create and use is either on your computer or in ‘the cloud’ of servers on the Internet. The choice between these two usage patterns is an interesting one. My email is all online via Gmail (although I access it via a desktop application), but everything else is on my own computer. My feed reader, calendar and task manager are all offline standalone programs. I don’t anticipate moving these into ‘the cloud’ anytime soon, but what about bookmarks?

Over the last few months, I’ve noticed that I’ve stopped adding many bookmarks to my browser. If I see something new, I either subscribe to the site’s RSS feed if I like it or simply remember where it is. I use the bookmarks toolbar in Firefox just below the address bar, but I rarely get to sites via the bookmarks menu option. More commonly, I use my Protopage to get to my most visited sites.

I’m thinking of slimming down my browser bookmarks to just my most commonly used ones, then shipping all the rest over to an online bookmarking system like del.icio.us or ma.gnolia. I’m wary of using a Web-based system though; how quickly will I be able to find links? Will the need to tag everything make it a less attractive prospect? It would be really interesting to see a study or analysis of the usability of different bookmarking methods.