0. I have everything in a text file because I still haven't found a solution that is easy to use, fast to use, allows tagging and a navigation that makes sense.<p>I don't care much about synchronisation, but most bookmarking service providers seem to care little about anything else with a few exceptions like thumbnails or backups.<p>I've had a few ideas of how to change that but there are some edge cases that are probably hard to solve (massive usage of tagging combined with ajaxified access would probably require quite the infrastructure, thumbnail support for a lot of websites is both extensive and requires worker queues/communication, latency ruins benefit of search-as-you-type).<p>I hope some day I will be able to tag all open pages into a temporary holding place, lasso all I want to keep and drag & drop the whole bundle into preconfigured places (like development, python, javascript) which then automatically tags them accordingly. And if there are some pictures in there I want to be able to zoom in seemlessly to take a better look at what I'm tagging. Then I open the sidebar, take the cat box from the shelve and I have a workdesk of hundreds of cat pictures which I can shuffle, sort by name, color or date, zoom into or stuff in another new box called favorites. Then I remember I need to do some work and type "de py b" and it recognizes that I want to take a look at all bookmarks tagged development, python, blog because there was something I wanted to read but I forgot the name of the page. Another click on sort-by-date and I'm sure I will find it.<p>Do many people need such features? I don't know. But it sounds amazing in my head and also fast enough to be of use, because if I have to navigate trough menus, type out the tags, or do the same thing a hundred times to tag a hundred pictures I might as well google for it and stuff the pictures into some session or even download them instead.