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We've resisted doing this in a codified manner because there's so many third-party tools that do this quite well. In fact, my favorite tool for this was designed and built right here on Stack Exchange by some awesome folks in our Software Recommendations community. See:

Is there a Chrome extension that I can use to note why I've opened a tab?Is there a Chrome extension that I can use to note why I've opened a tab?

Just toss links to answers in the notation, or some note that leads you to what you found interesting enough to save.

The resulting extension is very useful for folks that want to come back to some interesting bit, and additional tools (Evernote, social bookmarking tools, etc.) do such a good job at this - any stab we take at it would just be a little worse than what commonly exists.

As we look more deeply into how we show you 'all of you' as far as your contributions and achievements go - we can possibly revisit the idea of advanced following and favorites. I found the same desire for and utility in the idea when I learned Python using Stack Overflow, and again when I dove deeper into JavaScript without the aid of frameworks.

But, for now - I don't see us changing it any time soon.

We've resisted doing this in a codified manner because there's so many third-party tools that do this quite well. In fact, my favorite tool for this was designed and built right here on Stack Exchange by some awesome folks in our Software Recommendations community. See:

Is there a Chrome extension that I can use to note why I've opened a tab?

Just toss links to answers in the notation, or some note that leads you to what you found interesting enough to save.

The resulting extension is very useful for folks that want to come back to some interesting bit, and additional tools (Evernote, social bookmarking tools, etc.) do such a good job at this - any stab we take at it would just be a little worse than what commonly exists.

As we look more deeply into how we show you 'all of you' as far as your contributions and achievements go - we can possibly revisit the idea of advanced following and favorites. I found the same desire for and utility in the idea when I learned Python using Stack Overflow, and again when I dove deeper into JavaScript without the aid of frameworks.

But, for now - I don't see us changing it any time soon.

We've resisted doing this in a codified manner because there's so many third-party tools that do this quite well. In fact, my favorite tool for this was designed and built right here on Stack Exchange by some awesome folks in our Software Recommendations community. See:

Is there a Chrome extension that I can use to note why I've opened a tab?

Just toss links to answers in the notation, or some note that leads you to what you found interesting enough to save.

The resulting extension is very useful for folks that want to come back to some interesting bit, and additional tools (Evernote, social bookmarking tools, etc.) do such a good job at this - any stab we take at it would just be a little worse than what commonly exists.

As we look more deeply into how we show you 'all of you' as far as your contributions and achievements go - we can possibly revisit the idea of advanced following and favorites. I found the same desire for and utility in the idea when I learned Python using Stack Overflow, and again when I dove deeper into JavaScript without the aid of frameworks.

But, for now - I don't see us changing it any time soon.

Added some context. Copy edited.
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Peter Mortensen
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We've resisted doing this in a codified manner because there's so many third-party tools that do this quite well. In fact, my favorite tool for this was designed and built right here on Stack Exchange by some awesome folks in our Software Recommendations community. See:

Is there a Chrome extension that I can use to note why I've opened a tab?Is there a Chrome extension that I can use to note why I've opened a tab?

Just toss links to answers in the notation, or some note that leads you to what you found interesting enough to save.

The resulting extension is very useful for folks that want want to come back to some interesting bit, and additional tools (EvernoteEvernote, Social bookmarkingsocial bookmarking tools, etc.) do such a good job at this - any stab we take at it would just be a little worse than what commonly exists.

As we look more deeply into how we show you 'all of you' as far as your contributions and achievements go - we can possibly revisit the idea of advanced following and favorites. I found the same desire for and utility in the idea when I learned Python using SOStack Overflow, and again when I dove deeper into JavascriptJavaScript without the aid of frameworks.

But, for now - I don't see us changing it any time soon.

We've resisted doing this in a codified manner because there's so many third-party tools that do this quite well. In fact, my favorite tool for this was designed and built right here on Stack Exchange by some awesome folks in our Software Recommendations community. See:

Is there a Chrome extension that I can use to note why I've opened a tab?

Just toss links to answers in the notation, or some note that leads you to what you found interesting enough to save.

The resulting extension is very useful for folks that want to come back to some interesting bit, and additional tools (Evernote, Social bookmarking tools, etc) do such a good job at this - any stab we take at it would just be a little worse than what commonly exists.

As we look more deeply into how we show you 'all of you' as far as your contributions and achievements go - we can possibly revisit the idea of advanced following and favorites. I found the same desire for and utility in the idea when I learned Python using SO, and again when I dove deeper into Javascript without the aid of frameworks.

But, for now - I don't see us changing it any time soon.

We've resisted doing this in a codified manner because there's so many third-party tools that do this quite well. In fact, my favorite tool for this was designed and built right here on Stack Exchange by some awesome folks in our Software Recommendations community. See:

Is there a Chrome extension that I can use to note why I've opened a tab?

Just toss links to answers in the notation, or some note that leads you to what you found interesting enough to save.

The resulting extension is very useful for folks that want to come back to some interesting bit, and additional tools (Evernote, social bookmarking tools, etc.) do such a good job at this - any stab we take at it would just be a little worse than what commonly exists.

As we look more deeply into how we show you 'all of you' as far as your contributions and achievements go - we can possibly revisit the idea of advanced following and favorites. I found the same desire for and utility in the idea when I learned Python using Stack Overflow, and again when I dove deeper into JavaScript without the aid of frameworks.

But, for now - I don't see us changing it any time soon.

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user50049
user50049

We've resisted doing this in a codified manner because there's so many third-party tools that do this quite well. In fact, my favorite tool for this was designed and built right here on Stack Exchange by some awesome folks in our Software Recommendations community. See:

Is there a Chrome extension that I can use to note why I've opened a tab?

Just toss links to answers in the notation, or some note that leads you to what you found interesting enough to save.

The resulting extension is very useful for folks that want to come back to some interesting bit, and additional tools (Evernote, Social bookmarking tools, etc) do such a good job at this - any stab we take at it would just be a little worse than what commonly exists.

As we look more deeply into how we show you 'all of you' as far as your contributions and achievements go - we can possibly revisit the idea of advanced following and favorites. I found the same desire for and utility in the idea when I learned Python using SO, and again when I dove deeper into Javascript without the aid of frameworks.

But, for now - I don't see us changing it any time soon.