Larder.io – Bookmarking for Developers(larder.io) |
Larder.io – Bookmarking for Developers(larder.io) |
I would vouch for WorldBrain's Memex
Search, annotation, history, tagging, notes, collection. Productivity increased! :)
* Took me 4 tries to load the existing bookmarks from Brave. It kept crashing everytime * Doesn't support sub folders
Didn't wait to look at what other features weren't available. These two were good enough deal breakers for me.
Super interesting to see these grow.
Workflow can be -
1. Initially, user creates some top-level categories manually. Ex. programming languages, philosophy, art, computer networks, etc.
2. Tool starts filing bookmarks under these top level categories and further creates sub-categories by itself where it's obvious (e.g. under prog lang - python, js, java, etc)
3. Only if the tool is unable to find categories clearly, it should require user's attention.
For #2, tool should use factors like content, tags used by author in article, what type of content website usually posts, etc and generate score. If multiple categories above 90% score, bookmark under all those categories.
It integrates with Github and Stackoverflow in ways that Pocket doesn't. Not sure how useful that really is, but it's certainly trying to be "for developers".
home page
/pricing (404)
account sign up page
Before that I was a Pinboard user, but it had become unreliable, effectively rotting during the long stretches Maciej dedicated to his other interests.
For this I simply search my search-history on Google [1]
[1]: myactivity.google.com
> It's perfect for curating lists of libraries, tools, and reference material.
[1] serves that purpose as well.
* pinboard's blog includes financials https://blog.pinboard.in/blog/
* general advice to neither use nor run free services that don't have a business model https://blog.pinboard.in/2011/12/don_t_be_a_free_user/
* the great Delicious exodus of 2010, where pinboard acquired eleven thousand new users over a period of days https://blog.pinboard.in/2011/03/anatomy_of_a_crushing/
> On December 16th Yahoo held an all-hands meeting to rally the troops after a big round of layoffs. Around 11 AM someone at this meeting showed a slide with a couple of Yahoo properties grouped into three categories, one of which was ominously called "sunset". The most prominent logo in the group belonged to Delicious, our main competitor. Milliseconds later, the slide was on the web, and there was an ominous thundering sound as every Delicious user in North America raced for the exit.
> I got the message just as I was starting work for the day. My Twitter client, normally a place where I might see ten or twenty daily mentions of Pinboard, had turned into a nonstop blur of updates. My inbox was making a kind of sustained pealing sound I had never heard before. It was going to be an interesting afternoon.
I have been using it for years and since it's API is based on the original Delicious one there is most surely not a single tool out there that does not speak to Pinboard.
While there might be quite a few alternative solutions our there that are feature wise on par with (or better than) Pinboard - the latter one has a proven track record and a positive future outlook.
So I built an open-source self-hosted site for my bookmarks now:
Partly because of that I also subscribe to Pinboards optional archiving of the actual pages bookmarked, so that even if they disappear from the internet I still have a copy from the day I bookmarked it.