Lately, I started being much more systematic in how I keep track of what I read [1]. With it came the need to keep a reference to the source. While it is easy for scientific papers (just download the pdf), I struggle with web-based content (blog posts and podcasts, mostly). Keeping the URL is easy but not future proof. Printing to pdf kinda works for blog posts, but you loose links. Saving the html seems messy, and could still break if links to external content (stylesheets, scripts, images) break.
I am surely not the only one to hit this wall. I am curious to hear how others solved this.
[1] I use the Zettelkasten method, discovered recently through HN
Sometimes I then curl the original, and sometimes I "lynx -dump" it so I can have the original plain text.
You say:
> I use the Zettelkasten method ...
This means different things to different people. Many people read about the Zettelkasten and think it's basically a collection of "index cards", each with a single thought on it. As such it would be no different from a wiki with lots and lots of small pages. My understanding is that a Zettelkasten is much, much more than that. My understanding is still evolving, and I'd love to hear more about what you actually do.
Have you written it up? Would you do so and post a link? And email me in case I don't see it?