eyalnow
March 13, 2007
The whole point about Diigo is that the highlights and annotations stay on the page itself!
I see it Diigo as a unique information-management tool, in the way that the information is still linked to its source - you can read it in its original context.
Since installing Diigo a few days ago, I save highlights from nearly
every *page* that I visit - be it long essays or insightful sentences.
Another unique and powerful feature is the ability to search for words in the highlights and annotations that you’ve saved, so you can find something even if you didn’t initially tagged it.
I humbly suggest you do a re-evaluation of it.