MindIT-Bookmarking.com – Use Visual Bookmarks


MindIT-Bookmarking.comA site that intends to let you do something completely different with bookmarks, MindIT lets you organize and arrange links in a way that’s for the most part visual. As a user of this service, you can collect links from all over the Internet, and have them displayed as part of an interconnected web. This approach means that it’s dead simple to research any topic, as the different way in which concepts are related is made obviously clear. And everything’s also much, much faster than when using the standard lists of links that you get elsewhere.


These visual representations are called “Linkmaps”, and you can build as many of these as you need. When creating one, you’re given the chance to pick the color of each item, and also where it will be positioned. Which is just the right way to go about things, really. It’s a proven fact that different people remember things better if some colors are used instead of others. So, giving you the chance to paint the most important items red, blue, purple or whichever color lets you remember things better is just perfect.


And the addition of new items to any linkmap can be handled both manually, and by using the provided extension. This is available for Firefox, and it lets you have content added to any linkmap the minute you see it. The MindIT extension is found right here.

MindIT-Bookmarking.com In Their Own Words

MindiT is an online bookmarking manager with a twist. Instead of using standard lists, bookmarks a organized in a mindmap like graphical representation. The tool is especially useful tasks involving collecting and organizing a lot of online information.

Some Questions About MindIT-Bookmarking.com

What about letting you combine tree-based lists with these linkmaps? MindIT-Bookmarking.com


About the author

Born and bred in Maine, Roger is one of the longest-standing writers for KillerStartups.com. A translator by trade, he is passionate about art in all its forms. He enjoys both classic and contemporary literature, nature photography and music from both sides of the Atlantic. Fascinated by technology from an early age, he has always explored the ways in which computers let people articulate their thoughts and communicate better with the world at large.

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