For people who aren't just casual surfers the amount of information online presents a daunting management issue. You want to bookmark all the pages you find useful in your online research and business, but how on earth do you keep track of them all and get that one particular link back when you need it? Effective bookmark management is one of the biggest challenges to full-time Internet users and there's still much to be done with software packages to meet all the 'wish list' criteria for the 'perfect solution.'
There are a lot of programs to manage bookmarks, both shareware and retail. Compass, for instance, has been around since January 1997 and has been considered to be a standard in the genre for a long time. But while all of these programs do what they do well, none of them seems to be the all-in-one solution that hardcore web users crave for.
First and foremost, bookmark manager should be browser independent. No matter which browser you open - Internet Explorer, Netscape, Opera, Firefox - you shouldn't have to go looking for pages twice. You should be able to categorize your bookmarks and add unique names, personal keywords, and descriptive phrases. These features allow quick searches and easy sorting into meaningful groups. A rating system, color coding, macros, and hotkeys are all fantastically useful and synchronization is vital.
We just don't live in a world where people use only one computer anymore. Online managers, like NetSync and mybookmarkmanager.com, help to solve this problem partly. With these services users can access their bookmarks from any computer, but there's always something that concerns about privacy. If you surf on a machine, you leave trails, which are the problem for some people (not necessarily because they're going somewhere they 'shouldn't' but because they think their surfing habits are nobodies' business.
The new generation of flash memory 'thumb drives' is offering interesting possibilities in this regard, especially since the new U3 launch pad was introducted. With programs like P.I. Protector Mobility suite, all your Outlook and Internet settings are copied on to the flash drive and are available to you when you plug the drive into the USB port of another machine. And many of these programs erase all evidence of your activities when you remove the drive.Thankfully, newer browsers like Firefox have moved beyond simple hierarchical folders to bookmarks managing and have extensions available for synchronization routines. Unfortunately some of these are pretty cumbersome, actually requiring the user to export bookmarks and ftp them to a remote server for access later on another machine. Given that, it's safe to say that all the pieces of bookmark management haven't quite fallen into place yet.
Some people have so many bookmarks that they actually consider them as 'collections', and what's a collection without a useful catalog? We do so many complex things well with software, why can't we deal with an all-in-one solution for bookmark management?

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