How do you save and organize relevant stories/article you find on the web?<p>-Browser bookmarks dont save articles, only the link(some links will go down)<p>-Evernote web clipper is very good, but recent increase in the evernote subscription price, and it is not opensource .. i dont want to use it,,
Wallabag (<a href="https://www.wallabag.org/" rel="nofollow">https://www.wallabag.org/</a>) is a very nice open source alternative to Pocket.
For saving links, I'm a hoarder on Facebook (saving) and Twitter (favourites). For articles, it's usually saving to PDF or using Pocket (<a href="https://getpocket.com" rel="nofollow">https://getpocket.com</a>). For articles that I will actually read/share (i.e. not a "ooo, looks interesting!") I use <a href="https://saved.io" rel="nofollow">https://saved.io</a>.<p>Suffice to say...huge mess. But it kind of works.
I've recently deleted 224 bookmarks, all very interesting and neatly organized... but there's only so much time available, it felt like I was just hoarding bookmarks.<p>Now everything that I haven't accessed in a week gets deleted, I finally have some free space in the bookmark toolbar.<p>Anyway, to answer your question: for really important stuff (rarely), I just "print to pdf" and upload to google drive.
I use Pinboard. Super simple with easy tagging and easy to find stuff. Their "archival account" (not free) does exactly what you're looking for: <a href="https://pinboard.in/upgrade/" rel="nofollow">https://pinboard.in/upgrade/</a>
I think saving to PDF is overkill and takes up extra storage. Unless it is necessary to save images and charts associated with an article. These days, most images associated with articles are just file images someone tossed in for drama's sake (i.e. "A woman despairs over her computer" in relation to an article about budgeting.<p>So, what about save to plain text? Of course, while you can cut/paste, that's time consuming. I've yet to see a Pocket-like tool to quickly just save to plain-text and copy the relevant title as the file name and maybe also put it and the byline and date at the footer. Would be nice.
I generally use Pocket for my to-read list but anything I read goes into Pocket. Then if I want to keep a read article for future references I archive it in pocket and delete it otherwise.
I use shaarli (with it's not quite so good UI) and just put every link I know into there.<p>It's written in PHP and easy enough to host on a cheap Shared Host or VPS.