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There's one feature of pinboard that I found rather useful, and that's "tag bundles". It lets you browse your bookmarks using these bundles, which makes it possible to narrow down the view without having to go down into a single tag.
As an example, I had a "Healthcare" bundle (I studied, and now work in healthcare), that bundles together tags like "anotamy", "health", "psychiartry" and so on, roughly 40-50 tags. When I clicked on the bundle, it narrowed the view down to any bookmark containing any one of these tags. I don't need to be seeing all my programming bookmarks when I'm after healthcare info. I had like 10 different bundles, including things like "Development", "Games", "Science".
This can be solved by adding yet-another tag, of course. But this felt like a cleaner abstraction than doing that.
That doesn't mention filtering by the category / bundle / tag group or whatever it would be called, but for me that is implicit. Maybe give that comment an upvote if you prefer that style of categorization. I guess we can leave this issue open to see if this gets some more reactions than the comment in the other thread.
There's one feature of pinboard that I found rather useful, and that's "tag bundles". It lets you browse your bookmarks using these bundles, which makes it possible to narrow down the view without having to go down into a single tag.
As an example, I had a "Healthcare" bundle (I studied, and now work in healthcare), that bundles together tags like "anotamy", "health", "psychiartry" and so on, roughly 40-50 tags. When I clicked on the bundle, it narrowed the view down to any bookmark containing any one of these tags. I don't need to be seeing all my programming bookmarks when I'm after healthcare info. I had like 10 different bundles, including things like "Development", "Games", "Science".
This can be solved by adding yet-another tag, of course. But this felt like a cleaner abstraction than doing that.
This is somewhat related to #205.
Thanks for a great bookmark manager!
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