Other choices for this problem as usual at <a href="https://github.com/Kickball/awesome-selfhosted#bookmarks-and-link-sharing" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/Kickball/awesome-selfhosted#bookmarks-and...</a>.
I've used Raindrop for a long time (<a href="https://raindrop.io" rel="nofollow">https://raindrop.io</a>) to store a bookmark of all articles I read, categorised in months. It's been interesting to see the variations in "slow" months and busier months. I can see that I'm desparate to read stuff when I'm bored for example.<p>The one thing missing in Shiori for me to replace it would be a share extension for mobile. I use several different browsers and also often read for mobile, where Raindrop can store the bookmark via the share sheet.<p>I was interested if others do similar things?
Great! How does it compare to Wallabag (<a href="https://wallabag.org/en" rel="nofollow">https://wallabag.org/en</a>)? Does it provide something more? Wallabag changed my life, if there are some better features, I would switch in a bliss!
Really happy to see an update to this. Shaarli is an alternative, but seems to have issues with the default Docker container.<p>However, I would be much happier with an ncurses-based and file-system database for a bookmark manager that uses Markdown front matter or even just a TOML file:<p><a href="https://gohugo.io/content-management/front-matter/" rel="nofollow">https://gohugo.io/content-management/front-matter/</a><p>Would be much easier to manage bookmarks and sync them in a directory-tree format. Hopefully something like this will get added eventually.<p>I'm envisioning something like,<p><pre><code> * bookmarks/
* services/
* google.md
* favicons/</code></pre>
Plugging my self hosted web based bookmark manager as well <a href="https://github.com/jonschoning/espial" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/jonschoning/espial</a><p>I like the ingestion via bookmarklet method, as it's low user overhead; just does the job and gets out of your way.<p>I have 73k bookmarks on my instance, which other sass sites sometimes aren't optimized for, and can be sluggish while filtering searching etc.. (users normally have around 5k)<p>I can add detail for a docker build if desired, but the build from source is pretty straightforward.
I've been relying on Hacker News "upvoted submissions" and Twitter's "likes" to avoid losing interesting links forever. And also browser bookmarks, synchronized or not. Kind of low tech.<p>Wondering if I'm missing out by neglecting bookmark managing tools. They sure would have to integrate seamlessly with my browsing habits for them to stick.
The archival support looks cool. Right now I'm using Bookmark OS (<a href="https://bookmarkos.com" rel="nofollow">https://bookmarkos.com</a>) which may be hard to leave but I will check this out
Polar is another player in this space:<p><a href="https://getpolarized.io/" rel="nofollow">https://getpolarized.io/</a><p>... as are Wallabag and Raindrop which a few other people mentioned. Seems like there's definitely a longtail here.