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Overall it's much nicer than the older services such as Delicious and Pinboard, not to mention the atrocious built-in bookmarking features in modern browsers, which have been ossifying since around 1998. Safari is the only browser (that I know) that has a similar kind of bookmark-oriented browsing functionality, and it's just not very good. "scrapbooked" in a temporary place), and many other things. The same workflow works for tech projects I work on (where I may want some documentation, papers, etc. Normally you'd use browser tabs for this, except the Raindrop way means I'm not consuming lots of browser resources, and the collection stays persistent even if I close it. I can create a collection about this, bookmark things (destinations, discussion threads, Wikipedia entries, etc.) as I go along, and then use the built-in browser to go back and forth between each bookmark as I make notes or whatever. For example, let's say I'm researching places to travel. One of my favourite uses is creating a temporary "project-oriented" collection. The browser integration is fantastic, and there's a really smooth native-feel Electron app that has an integrated browser. It's just a much better bookmarking app than what's come before. I've been using Raindrop for about a year.