Documents, believe it or not. And I'm really happy with how it works. I use Google Docs, but Word or whatever would work too.<p>One of the key things is I <i>don't</i> try to create some kind of central repository of every link I care about. In fact, I explicitly avoid this. (So I don't have a huge document with all my links. Nor do I have or want any kind of single, comprehensive database of all my links.)<p>If I'm dealing with a particular topic, I want those links together in one place. Eventually when I move on and forget about that topic, the links are pretty irrelevant, and since they are organized together in that document, there's basically O(1) cleanup to get that clutter out of my life: just stop looking at that one document.<p>Usually how a new document forms is that I'm working on or researching some topic, and I start getting that feeling that I have a lot of browser tabs that I don't want to lose. At that point, I create a new document, the title is whatever topic I'm working on, I create some headings to categorize things by type, and then in outline format I add links along with a very brief word or two about what is useful about that link.<p>You're probably thinking that copy/pasting links and typing stuff is a lot of overhead compared to just hitting a hotkey to bookmark something. It is more work, but it's easily worth it. Every time I make one of these documents, I'm glad I did because it becomes a lot easier to find stuff and remember which stuff is important. Sometimes the process of organizing it into categories even helps me understand the topic better. Sort of an exercise in getting everything in one place and seeing the 30,000 foot view.<p>So for example, my most recent one is called "COVID-19 resources". The top-level headings are "Practical Advice" (info on DIY masks, links to charts of symptoms compared to flu and allergies, a video on hand washing technique), "News and Info" (the John Hopkins map, other maps, graphs and charts, links to online discussion forums, CDC and WHO articles, wikipedia articles), and "Local Info" (state and local government status and announcement, health department twitter account, local guide to restaurants with takeout), and "Volunteer Info" (opportunities to help).<p>Come to think of it, I really need to add a section called "Science and Research". I've run across several interesting papers and articles about the disease, and I keep digging to re-find these links when I want to refer to it again. They belong in this document.<p>Anyway, hopefully at some point COVID-19 won't be front of mind for all of us, and I will stop opening this document every day to check the latest stats. But I'll still have the doc if I want to refer to it.