+1 bonus points for FOSS
I just pin the tab and leave it there forever
Wait, you guys are reading them later?
Tabbed browsing
And then sometimes the browser forgets that it should reopen them and I’m like “noooooooooo… but actually, I’m free now” and pile another several hundreds of tabs right away ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
right click -> open link in new tab
[I have hundreds of browser tabs open]
If you have a mouse wheel try pressing it down while hovering over a link. Should open in new tab.
Alternatively, ctrl while clicking.
I like Linkwarden, Omnivore and wallabag
Firefox has Pocket built into the desktop client. It’s not too bad.
- SingleFile on Firefox and Chromium (I have about 2 GB of saved HTML files)
- SCREENSHOT EVERYTHING NO MATTER PHONE OR COMPUTER
- To save links, I never rely on bookmarking. I use “Save All Tab URLs” on Firefox and similar addon for Chromium, and save all my URLs in plaintext files.
- I am one of those archivist saviours who keeps silently archiving a bunch of obscure webpages onto archive.org and archive.is, and keeps updating archived webpages.
Everything mentioned here is FOSS, resistant against future inaccessibility, and time tested by a data archivist/curator (me).
Thank you for your hard work
- Feedr
- Lemmy save
- WhatsApp message yourself
- Teams message yourself
- Google Keep (book recommendations etc.)
I’m using Firefox bookmarks. I know it’s basic, but it’s very easy to use and I have zero complaints.
I always laugh when I see people’s workflows that basically come down to reinventing browser bookmarks. This ancient functionality is good and dead simple
I use Feeder for rss feeds, and I’ll save articles in there for later
+1 for Feeder, I do most of my doom scrolling on there nowadays.
I wish it had the ability to filter feeds. There’s a lot of rss feeds that have good stuff interspersed with articles that are basically ads. Like just being able to filter out “prime day” or “the top X widgets to do Y” would get rid of a lot of fluff
Telegram Saved Messages
Pocket to aggregate everything
I use raindrop.io it’s very pretty and easy enough to use. On Android I can use the share menu to store articles making it easy to use on my phone too.
I use my browser tabs honestly.
Wallabag. It’s a little lacking and buggy, but I can host it myself. Omnivore looks slick but isn’t self-host-ready.





