I use read-it-later services extensively to save any news I want to do blog posts about later, or something I want to look at in more detail when I have time (and three monitors).
I had been self-hosting Wallbag for quite a while, and did a video about it too, but I had some issues re-installing it when I moved to Docker container hosting on my VPS.
Ominvore certainly looks very interesting, with a modern interface and quite a few useful features. I’m starting so long with their free cloud hosted service, and could register with ease, and even initiate an import from Pocket. They do have a docker-compose file for setting up containerised self-hosting, but I’m going to wait a bit just to see if that matures a bit, as it seems it is early days still and no proper guide has been completed yet for it.
Apart from the usual saving links for reading later, with tags, archiving, etc, it also supports a clutter-free reader view for easy reading without adverts. In the reading view you can also change formatting, highlight text, add/view notes (in a Notebook view), and track reading progress across all devices (each note also shows a yellow progress line on its tile view to indicate reading progress).
It also has a feature for subscriptions via e-mail. Omnivore can generate unique e-mail addresses you can use for subscribing to online newsletters, and it is intelligent enough to realise that if a mail contains a welcome message, note from the author, etc that will be forwarded by Omnivore to your main e-mail address (without exposing that to the newsletter service).
It also has integration with Logseq, Obsidian notes, webhooks, and more.
You can save links by adding them in the app, using a browser extension, or by using the share option on mobile devices and just selecting to share to the Omnivore app.
There is no price model yet set up for the service, but I’m pretty sure they’ll have an ongoing useful free tier with their online service, and probably only charge for some more advanced functionality. There is always the self-hosted option too. But for now, this looks very functional and useful to me, and I’ve started using it.
Anyone else remember Mozilla promising to open source Pocket 6 years ago?
As a result of this strategic acquisition, Pocket will become a wholly owned subsidiary of Mozilla Corporation and will become part of the Mozilla open source project.
Source: https://blog.mozilla.org/en/mozilla/news/mozilla-acquires-pocket/
P.S. Sorry for out of topic comment.
Hell I remember when it was called Read It Later, long before the Pocket days. Back when it was good lol.
I miss del.icio.us. Simpler times.
Now, that’s a name I haven’t heard in a long time… A long time.
Android app and browsers extentions are propietary, take note on that.
Is this not the code though for the Android app at https://github.com/omnivore-app/omnivore/tree/main/android/Omnivore
there is such a thing bookmarks, check it out in your spare time
My bookmarks only save a title and link - no tags to group, no full text content, no unread indication. So, how would one use bookmarks in a meaningful way? I could use a piece of paper too, but it’s not the best way for me.
Do they have offline support on desktop? I would expect it to be a key functionality of any read it later app, and yet can’t find any that that does.
I put my Android phone on plane mode, shut the app and reopened it, and yes I could read the full content when opening each article.
Thanks, but I was asking specifically for desktop. Most apps do have offline support for mobile, but never desktop for some reason
I’ve been using a personal discord server to *save all the things I want to read, watch, or look at later
Edit: no idea how Dave found his way into this comment
Discord is not FOSS and is a privacy nightmare.