In my post I was talking about "frequently accessed bookmarks"
rather than about "how to have the same site in more than one
bookmark folder". But I've managed to achieve (by accident)
something close to that, too.
What happened was I went to www.foobar.com and 'saved' that as
a bookmark (and moved it to, say, the bookmark folder called
"Hardware"). Then another day I happened to be looking at
www.foobar.com/storage, and 'saved' *that* as a bookmark (and
moved it into, say, the bookmark sub-folder called "Disk Vendors").
Now, either because the site happened to use the __same__ title
on more than one of its pages, or because I edited the bookmark
entries to truncate them to, say, 22 characters (so my bookmark
drop-downs wouldn't be too wide) -- I noticed that the __list__
titles for the two entries looked the same (only in the 'Manage
Bookmarks' window did the browser show that those two entries had
non-identical URLs).
mikus
p.s. Sometimes a site will resolve to the same IP-address for
both www.site.com *and* for site.com. In such case, by
manual editing of the 'saved' URL, one ought to be able
to keep two separate bookmark entries that point to the
__same__ page !!
pps. When I *copied* my Mozilla bookmarks file into the Phoenix
profile directory, Phoenix didn't like it (maybe because it
wants a PERSONAL_TOOLBAR_FOLDER in there?). So I put back
the Phoenix-created (nearly empty) bookmarks file into the
Phoenix profile directory, then used 'Manage Bookmarks' to
__import__ the Mozilla bookmarks file into Phoenix -- now
the bookmarks file that Phoenix saved *does* have all the
bookmarks that I'm keeeping.
On Sat, 05 Oct 2002 21:15:35 -0400 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Mikus Grinbergs) said:
>
> >I too can say "my frequently accessed bookmarks are at the top of the
> >list - and filed in appropriate nested folders". There was *nothing*
> >that involved "how to pull that off"
>
> Guess again. I see now that you can copy the bookmarks from one place
> to another. But it will absolutely not allow me to save two and move
> them to different places.
>
> The way you pull it off is to avoid one method and use the other. Odd.
>
> Jim L