After months of work, the new Delicious is almost ready to come out of the oven. When we release it, you’ll be automatically logged out of your account and will have to log in again, due to some changes we’re making behind the scenes.
That means now is a good time to make sure you know your username and password. Your username is what you see in the address bar when you visit your bookmarks (http://del.icio.us/your_username, soon to become http://delicious.com/your_username). And what’s your password? If you don’t remember, you can use our password reset tool to get a reset link delivered to the email address associated with your account.
But wait, is that email address correct and valid? You can check by visiting “change email” in your account settings when you’re logged in. Be sure to keep this address up to date. If the day comes when you’re logged out, you’ve forgotten your password, and the email address associated with your account is inaccessible or mistyped, we won’t be able to help you recover the password. So check it!
While we’re on the subject, remember that nobody from Delicious will ever ask you for your password. Also, don’t give your password to third-party sites that you don’t trust.
As we move toward launch day, we’ll keep you updated. Thanks for your patience and support, everyone.






Fresh news from deep within Tag Mountain: we just launched an early, limited Preview of the Delicious redesign we’ve been working on for the past few months. We’ve refreshed the UI, built an entirely new (and faster) search engine, and added numerous improvements based on your feedback. The goal of this Preview is to get feedback from our users about the design changes and also start to put our new platform through the paces.

In the past, we had a lot of questions from TypePad bloggers about how they could do
this themselves, and instead of having them convert to Advanced
Templates and copy and paste template code into their blogs, we wanted
to save them the hassle and just do it as an option in the application.
We've just launched our own official del.icio.us application for Facebook. It's super easy to use; just visit
Adobe Illustrator is one of my favorite design tools, and as part of the redesign of del.icio.us I’ve been using it in a number of interesting ways. For example, I’ve written JavaScript code to pull in and parse del.icio.us RSS feeds then automatically render my latest designs in Illustrator using real data. This allows us to rapidly iterate on the design well before anyone has to write any real code.
For the past few months, we've been working on a new del.icio.us Bookmarks extension for Firefox. We quietly released it to the addons.mozilla.org community to see what would happen, and we've been constantly working on it to make it great for our core community of users. Since that launch, we've received loads of great feedback and have been working non stop to address the biggest requests from the community. 


These are some snapshots of what the 



Del.icio.us is three years old today! It's started