I have noticed that when faced with articles that are either long, or likely to be useful in the future, people tend to add them to their reading list.
I am curious about how do you use this list. Do you set a time during the week when you go through it and read what you have saved during the last days?
Do you use it as a sort of library, where you can go and search for answers on interesting topics whenever the need comes?
Personally, I am guilty of saving cool stuff in my reading list but then never going back to it, so I am looking for tips on how to optimize this behavior and take advantage of the awesome content I save.
Top comments (9)
I'm ashamed to admit this, but my strategy is adding articles to my reading list and forgetting about them.
don't be, any strategy is fine :-)
I am happy to see that I am not alone when doing that! π
Well, I've always had a different strategy - I usually bookmark articles in dev.to which are either long or I cannot read them when I find it. I usually give one day a month to read them. For articles I will refer to I save them in browser bookmarks. Though I would love to see atleast ability to group saved articles into collections.
Without a searching API, bookmarks are like drowning. Dev.to should expose a searchable API which might be Swagger or GraphQL.
They actually have an API, however I don't think it exposes the readinglist unfortunately. I think that would be neat, as then I could read the articles on my e-reader via pocket. Maybe that can be achieved via webhooks though? I'm not certain.
Thanks! The API now seems to have a read-only readinglist: docs.forem.com/api/#operation/getR...
dev.to/api/readinglist
Maybe I can build a tasker automation around this...
I used to be a "reading list inbox zero" person, the lockdown made that 0 levitate to 240+ items. I'll catch up :D
I do not keep items that I've already read in the reading list. I read an item, I take it out. Simple as that. If I need to save something for long term I use the browser bookmarks, nothing fancier than that.
I wonder if the people who are saving this article into their reading list are doing so ironically π