A single-user <i>fediverse-enabled</i> bookmarking website. Here's an example of someone using it: <a href="https://friend.camp/@darius/111014166999840926" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://friend.camp/@darius/111014166999840926</a>
> the idea is to store a collection of URLs along with some associated, browsable data—a customizable page title; a "description" field for summaries, notes or excerpts; a list of category "tags"—for your own reference over time and/or to share with other people.<p>I use a text file (my text editor recognizes URLs and lets me click on them). I often wonder why people need an app to manage a simple text file.
I'm curious about how this general format of social blogging works psychologically.<p>Do users tend to get FOMO at a similar rate to the feed paradigm that is the industry norm or is it reduced? Do users encounter any anxiety over their tagging styles?<p>If you're unable to answer that's fine.
Maybe I'm missing something, but in the current state how is it different than just posting links on Mastodon?<p>Looking at <a href="https://friend.camp/@bookmarks@dfk-postmarks.glitch.me" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://friend.camp/@bookmarks@dfk-postmarks.glitch.me</a> it seems that posting links with hashtags would give you the same functionality.