Top 5 Best Bookmark Manager Tools to Manage Bookmarks Easily 1. ICloud Bookmarks. As you can guess from the name, iCloud Bookmarks is the official bookmark management solution from Apple, which comes pre-built in devices running iOS and Mac.With that, you get to understand that the service limited to only the users of Apple products. Pins is an easy and elegant bookmarks manager app for the mac. It is the organized, taggable, searchable, syncable, shareable, visual bookmark library for all your needs.
25 Jan 2007 · Filed in ReviewThe idea behind del.icio.us is great, but for me it becomes truly useful using a “rich client” instead of a web browser. For a long time, Cocoalicious has been that “rich client,” offering a combination of native Mac OS X technologies with the web services offered by del.icio.us. Unfortunately, it appears as though Cocoalicious is no longer under active development, and so I’ve gone seeking other solutions.
There are quite a few bookmark managers out there for the Mac, but not so many that offer integration with del.icio.us. Likewise, there are a number of utilities that offer to make posting to del.icio.us easier (Pukka and Postr come to mind) but don’t necessarily offer the bookmark management functionality upon which I rely. So far, I’ve only found two applications that have the right balance of functionality.
The first of these is WebnoteHappy. It looks as if WebnoteHappy originally started out as “just” a bookmark manager; del.icio.us support seems to be an add-on rather than an integral part of the application itself. Nevertheless, WebnoteHappy does have a couple of things going for it:
It supports integration with NetNewsWire, my RSS reader, so that I can post URLs directly from NNW’s context menu. (Currently, only Cocoalicious, Pukka, Postr, and WebnoteHappy appear to be supported.)
It supports AppleScript.
It supports Smart Folders to group bookmarks according to tags, description, or notes. Acdsee photo studio for mac.
Best Free Bookmark Manager
The best part of del.icio.us, to me, is the tags. This is where WebnoteHappy seems to be the weakest. I can’t browse my bookmarks by tags (although I could create a Smart Folder based on tags), there’s no tag autocompletion, and when posting to del.icio.us via WebnoteHappy from NNW I’m not given the option to assign any tags (indeed, I’m not even given the option to share the bookmark via del.icio.us).
Photoshop filters for photography. The second application is a relatively new application; it’s called Socialist. Socialist appears to be built from the ground up to be a “rich” del.icio.us client. The relative immaturity of Socialist is showing up in some areas, though:
No AppleScript support.
No integration with NNW. (Granted, the list of supported applications is fairly small, but this is a feature I use regularly.)
Fortunately, Socialist does support tags, and does provide a way to browse bookmarks via tags. The current release doesn’t support browsing via multiple tags or tag autocompletion, but supposedly those features are in the next version of the software (which is due out soon).
Each application has its own unique strengths and weaknesses, and both are lacking some features that I would love to see:
Growl support (to provide a Growl notification when a URL is successfully posted to del.icio.us)
AppleScript support (so URL management tasks can be automated a bit more)
Spotlight integration (ability to search URL and note text from the Spotlight menu)
Of course, I already mentioned browsing via tags (including the ability to select multiple tags and see only the bookmarks tagged with all the selected tags) and tag autocompletion. If NNW integration isn’t possible, then the ability to at least pull the contents of the clipboard into the new bookmark sheets in each application would be good. An entry on the Services menu would be handy as well.
Any other products out there I should be considering? Anyone have any feedback on one of these two products? I’d love to hear from real-world users on what they like or don’t like about either of these two applications.
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Safari User Guide
A bookmark is a link to a webpage that you save so you can quickly revisit the page later.
Add a bookmark
In the Safari app on your Mac, go to the page you want to bookmark.
Click the Share button in the toolbar, then choose Add Bookmark.
Choose where to add the bookmark, and rename it if you like.
Add this page to: Click the pop-up menu and choose a folder. The default is Favorites.
Rename the bookmark: Enter a brief name that will help you identify the webpage.
Add a description: Enter more details as an optional reminder about the webpage.
Click Add.
You can also add a bookmark in the Smart Search field: Move the pointer over the Smart Search field, click and hold the One-Step Add button that appears at the left end of the field, then choose a bookmarks folder from the list. Or, drag a URL to the bookmarks sidebar.
After you add the bookmark, you can find it in the sidebar.
Find a bookmark
In the Safari app on your Mac, click the Sidebar button in the toolbar, then click the Bookmarks button .
Enter the bookmark name in the search field at the top of the sidebar.
You may have to scroll up to reveal the search field.
Use a bookmark
In the Safari app on your Mac, click the Sidebar button in the toolbar, then click the Bookmarks button .
Or, choose Bookmarks > Show Bookmarks.
Click the bookmark in the sidebar.
You can also choose it from the Bookmarks menu.
Manage bookmarks
In the Safari app on your Mac, click the Sidebar button in the toolbar, then click the Bookmarks button .
Control-click a bookmark or folder.
Choose from the shortcut menu to do one of the following:
Rename or edit a bookmark or folder.
You can also force click the name, or click and hold the name until it’s highlighted and then enter a new one.
Edit a bookmark’s website address (URL).
Copy or delete a bookmark or folder.
Create a bookmark folder.
See detailed folder contents.
To edit a bookmark’s description, double-click a folder in the sidebar, then Control-click the item and choose Edit Description.
You can also manage bookmarks by choosing Bookmarks > Edit Bookmarks.
Note: Safari uses iCloud to keep your bookmarks the same on your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, and Mac computers that have Safari turned on in iCloud preferences. With iCloud, your bookmarks and Reading List are archived automatically, and you can restore them from an earlier version at any time.