Reading useful articles is easy. Remembering why they were useful is harder.
A simple habit can help: after reading something online, write one short sentence about what you want to remember.
The sentence does not need to summarize the whole article. It only needs to explain why the page mattered.
For example:
“This helped me think about how to organize saved notes more clearly.”
That small sentence gives the page a purpose. Later, when you return to your saved information, you can understand why you kept it.
This habit also helps reduce clutter. If you cannot explain why something matters, you may not need to save it.
Better online reading is not about collecting more pages. It is about keeping useful ideas easy to find and easy to use.