Save by purpose, not by platform
It is often more useful to organize resources by what they help you do than by whether they came from a blog, a video channel, or a shop. Categories like project ideas, beginner instruction, supply sources, advanced techniques, and classes usually stay useful longer.
That kind of sorting reflects how you actually work rather than where the content happened to appear.
Keep project-specific lists short
When planning a specific build or make, create a short list of only the most relevant resources. A small focused set is easier to use than a giant archive.
This also helps you avoid the trap of endless browsing disguised as preparation.
Record why each resource matters
A saved link becomes much more valuable when it includes one line explaining why it stood out. That note might mention a useful material comparison, a strong teaching style, a niche technique, or a trustworthy supply source.
Even a few words of context can save a surprising amount of time later.
Review and prune
Not every saved resource deserves permanent space. Some will become outdated, too basic, or less relevant once your skill level changes.
A simple review habit keeps your resource library closer to a working toolkit and farther from a digital junk drawer.