Wakelet is a great tool for creating your digital scrapbook

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

Wakelet is one of my favorite tools for digital scrapbooking—saving, organizing and sharing social posts and other links. It lets you save posts from Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube—or any site—into a digital page you can share.

Here are four things you can do with Wakelet.

1. Curate a topic of importance to you

If you follow a particular topic, Wakelet is great for gathering and organizing Tweets, stories, videos, or anything else on that subject. You can annotate any link you add with as much or as little text as you’d like.

I like the fact that you can view social posts and videos in full right within Wakelet. You can then share a link to your collection with anyone you choose, either so they can view it or add to it. You can then continue adding to that collection over time. 

Here’s a Wakelet collection I came across recently called Black Voices, celebrating fiction and non-fiction for children and teens, curated by the team at a British library.

2. Gather highlights of an event

I’ve used Wakelet at conferences to save useful Tweets, videos, or other links related to that event. It’s a useful way to curate public notes on the event because you can easily include others’ social posts as well as your own annotations.

Some examples:

  • I created this collection for a talk I gave last year for the Social Media Weekend conference. What’s in it: I saved resources I used and others’ Tweets. 
  • I took these live notes at a #PaidContent event I hosted a few years ago What’s in it: Tweets and links from event presenters and attendees.
  • Summary points and highlights allowed me to look back at insights and resources Amy Webb shared in her 2014 Top 10 trends talk. 

3. Assemble a portfolio of your work

Collect the work you do into a nice page that you can add to whenever you want. You can annotate things, divide it into sections, and use the built-in social search to find things to add. Here’s an example of a student portfolio on Wakelet.

4. Use it with your team

Explore this batch of interesting Wakelet collections to see more examples of how people use it. 

  • Teachers use it to share resources with students. 
  • Journalists use it to share curated content with readers. 
  • Marketing teams use it to collect comments people make on social platforms. 
  • Designers use it to collect visual inspiration via images, videos, & social posts. 

I loved Storify. It was a fantastic tool for saving the best tweets on a particular hashtag or gathering up highlights from various social platforms. You could include YouTube videos, Facebook posts, Flickr images and more. Sadly, it shuttered in 2018. 

Now Wakelet has emerged to take its place. It’s simple and free to use. (So many useful tech tools have shuttered that I once paused to collect a Twitter list of more than 50 useful tools that have been closed.)

More Wakelet examples

How to Get Started with Wakelet

Once you create a free account at Wakelet.com, add the ChromeFirefox, or Edge browser extension. That will enable you to save anything you encounter on the Web to a Wakelet collection. You can also download the iOSAndroid, or Amazon app version if you want to save things from a mobile device.

How to Save Things

When you encounter any article, video, social post—on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, or any other site—you can save it to Wakelet. The simplest way is to just right-click and save it to a Wakelet collection. Collections are basically just special pages that house a particular set of links that you’ve saved.  

Another way to save sites to Wakelet is to click on the little bookmarklet in your browser bar once you’ve installed the browser extension. You can also search for something at Wakelet.com or just add a URL. 

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91127312/wakelet-is-a-great-tool-for-creating-your-digital-scrapbook?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvorené 1y | 20. 5. 2024, 11:20:06


Ak chcete pridať komentár, prihláste sa

Ostatné príspevky v tejto skupine

How Sega’s surprise Saturn launch backfired—and changed gaming forever

In May of 1995, the video game industry hosted its first major trade show. Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) was designed to shine a spotlight on games, and every major player wanted to stand in

14. 7. 2025, 12:40:06 | Fast company - tech
What are ‘tokenized’ stocks, and why are trading platforms like Robinhood offering them?

Robinhood cofounder and CEO Vlad Tenev channeled Hollywood glamour last month in Cannes at an extravagantly produced event unveiling of the trading platform’s newest products, including a tokenize

14. 7. 2025, 12:40:05 | Fast company - tech
‘Johnny Mnemonic’ predicted our addictive digital future

In the mid-1990s, Hollywood began trying to envision the internet (sometimes called the “information superhighway”) and its implications for life and culture. Some of its attempts have aged better

14. 7. 2025, 12:40:04 | Fast company - tech
The era of free AI scraping may be coming to an end

Ever since AI chatbots arrived, it feels as if the media has been on the losing end o

14. 7. 2025, 10:20:06 | Fast company - tech
5 work-from-home purchases worth splurging for

Aside from the obvious, one of the best parts of the work-from-home revolution is being able to outfit your workspace as you see fit.

And if you spend your days squinting at a tiny lapto

14. 7. 2025, 5:40:05 | Fast company - tech
A newly discovered exoplanet rekindles humanity’s oldest question: Are we alone?

Child psychologists tell us that around the age of five or six, children begin to seriously contemplate the world around them. It’s a glorious moment every parent recognizes—when young minds start

13. 7. 2025, 11:10:06 | Fast company - tech