I have like a billion bookmarks and sometimes I tag them well, but sometimes I don't, and once every few months I'll go through the list at random and tag away.
But like, what's the point of all those bookmarks? Outside of implementation details that are captured on stack overflow in convenient question - answer format, I feel like everything that exists on the internet already exists better in books. Even my own blog is basically just me stumbling though photography and philosophy and travel destinations, writing out information that's much more easily understood from published materials.
Well, I suppose one thing small sites are good at is condensing information that should be condensed elsewhere but isn't. My most popular article (gets tons of organic traffic from Google) is titled "How to Rent a Motorcycle in Taiwan." If you searched that on Google I think the top few links should end in .gov.tw but none of them do.
But like, what's the point of all those bookmarks? Outside of implementation details that are captured on stack overflow in convenient question - answer format, I feel like everything that exists on the internet already exists better in books. Even my own blog is basically just me stumbling though photography and philosophy and travel destinations, writing out information that's much more easily understood from published materials.
Well, I suppose one thing small sites are good at is condensing information that should be condensed elsewhere but isn't. My most popular article (gets tons of organic traffic from Google) is titled "How to Rent a Motorcycle in Taiwan." If you searched that on Google I think the top few links should end in .gov.tw but none of them do.