A few years back...I think it was during the covid lockdown shenanigans... I started entering my logbook into a spreadsheet, line by line. I'm only just North of 300 hours so it's not such a great task for me as it would be for some, but still, it's quite a few line items. I did it mostly in the evenings while the wife had something on TV
Since then I added tabs for airports visited and aircraft flown, I've also played around with graphs for hours by year and a few other things
For the list of aircraft flown, I got on a rat trail researching each tail number to find the actual models, horsepower, where they are now, and such...and in most cases I found the serial numbers of each aircraft logged. I was able to clarify my list of types flown, to actual model...cessna 150M for example, instead of just C150 as it was logged. That also lead me onto a few interesting finds online,
such as a magazine article about a lady who soloed in an Aeronca Champ in 1960. The same Champ that I would attempt to fly a few decades later. She later went on to win the Wright Bros Master Pilot Award
Sometime later I exported that spreadsheet over to myflightbook.com, to play around with that. It offers some nice features, including a map of visited airports.
As a rusty pilot, I've found it very useful for daydreaming and such. Just yesterday, the thread here about shortest distance cross country had me breaking out the spreadsheet and myflightbook.com to find mine. It's a little bit fun to have the data, so I would encourage you to continue working on line-by-line entry