On my quick tips I mention a way to send links to online articles for later viewing and archiving. This strategy is good for the short term. The scrapbook strategy I’m about to discuss takes it a bit farther. It preserves the article for the extreme long term.
Gmail as a scrapbook of the internet.
Ever found a great article on a subject that you want to save complete with pictures. And you want to save it for the long term. You can build your own personal library with Gmail and the Google toolbar.
Yes a toolbar. The Google toolbar has many uses, but to keep it simple we’ll focus on one feature. A powerful feature that sometimes gets lost in the jungle of options. So here it goes.
Optional
If you don’t like the Google Toolbar and want to end up with a clean interface follow the following steps:
The following example of course deals with Firefox, like most of my articles.
- Install the Google Toolbar. Click on View Menu | Toolbars | Customize
- Instead of using the Customize Toolbar dialog, direct your attention to the Google Toolbar and locate the “send to” icon

- Drag this icon to be a part of your links Toolbar.

- Then close the dialog. Click on View Menu | Toolbars and uncheck the Google Toolbar. Now you have a clean system again with the exception of the new send to icon.
Usage
Now when you see anything on any webpage you want to save.
- Highlight and click the
icon. - Select Gmail.
- Put your email address.
- Click send
That is it. Now you have a permanent copy in your massive Gmail account quickly searchable for your convenience.
You can also skip the highlight and simply click on the “send to” icon and send the whole page.
Advanced (optional)
What I do is create a filter which activates any time an email contains aStar or astar. It then archives, labels it as an “a Article” and adds a star to it. Reason for “a” is a strategy I use to sort labels not only alphabetically, but also by attention priority. My top labels have an “a” in front with a space. When I’m done reading the article I take off the star.
Convenience
You can archive more than just the Internet this way. You can email yourself pictures you take on the road business cards and the like. Just tag them as you email them. Not only with the “astar” operator but with key words such as “John Smith Business card.” If you forget to tag, reply to that picture with the key words as body or subject. That will create a conversation which is searchable.