Spyke
Kusimulkkureply
lemm.ee

I went with Readeck a few months ago. It's a nice solution between the barebones ones and those that have all the features.

5

I ended up on Readeck as well, very sleek interface, perfect for sharing articles via public links, self-hosting it was very easy to set up.

3

I use Readeck as well. My only complaint about Readeck is there really is no 'one click, backup/export' option. You can, however, download all the zip files it makes along with the db, and transfer it to another server. I know you can import bookmarks from Firefox, and you can export the epub, but you can't export all of your saves. At least I've never found a way beyond just downloading the full db and zips.

2

I just set up Readeck today. I've never used pocket or anything of the sort but it's already proving pretty useful. I tend to do a lot of 100%/platinum runs of various games and I've been tossing guide bookmarks in a folder for ages, this is a great way to sort those out

2

I'll throw another recommendation behind Karakeep. The fact I can share a page fromy mobile browser or use a browser extension on a laptop/desktop is excellent.

Another great thing for me is the oidc support so I can log in without passwords and rely on my Pocket ID instance and log in using a passkey. (Authelia, Authentic, Keycloak and similar identity providers would work too)

4
Kusimulkkureply
lemm.ee

I have no idea why the fucking docker instance refuses to work. I've tried so many times...

7

Post it! Let's see what's up.

I've been using the docker for ages but there was a SQL update command I had to do at one point (I didn't RTFM) but other than that, smooth sailing.

Even has a Koreader plugin.

2

It's a downright dirty shame no devs have taken on Raindrop. It's a slick little app.

2
Xanzareply
lemm.ee

That sucks, I immediately wanted it. :(

1

It’s still worth using, IMO. They present themselves as very privacy respecting and technologically savvy. I can say after years of using it, it feels that way. They never get in my way and consistently release quality, stable updates.

2

I've just started using linkwarden and love it as well. I chose it over Karakeep because it archives a copy of the page so it's still accessible if the original page is modified or becomes inaccessible in the future.

1
jacksquatreply
what.forfi.win

I've mostly loved it too but I'd really like to have something that had lower RAM usage. I only have a few hundred entries and right now my container stack is using ~620Mb. Just seems rather high for what it's doing/does. Are you finding the same kind of usage?

1

Currently trying Readeck.

Karakeep is also popular, but doesn't default to an article view which I prefer.

Wallabag looks good, but I had difficulty getting its docker setup

6
lemmy.world
  • Readeck is kind of a 'read it later' app.
  • Karakeep is for saving data like web sites etc, that you'd like to preserve the content thereof.
  • LinkWarden is for links, bookmarks tho you can use it like Readeck.
  • Walabag: I've never used it but I've heard good things about it.

Others can be found here: https://openalternative.co/alternatives/pocket

2

I tried Hoarder (KaraKeep) & Linkwarden. Both excellent but I preferred the UI for Linkwarden, particularly on mobile, so I stuck with that - i found Hoarder awkward to edit thumbnails for example though things may have changed in KaraKeep. From Android perspective both have apps but I prefer to use browser plugin. With Linkwarden there's some hoops to jump through on Android Firefox but it works perfectly once set up. Both excellent choices.

2

Kind of a piggyback on this -- is there a favoured "search my saved links from karakeep/linkwarden/hamster.io and show them first before feeding the search terms to google/bing/whatever" extension for your browser?

1

Thanks everyone for your many replies! Week start out with wallabag and see where it will lead me.

1

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