Greetings everyone! Daniel here, I've been working on Linkwarden part-time over the past few months.
Linkwarden is a self-hosted, open-source collaborative bookmark manager to collect, organize and archive webpages.
Key features:
📸 Preserve webpages as Screenshot, PDF, etc. So you can access them even if they are taken down.
👥 Collaborative, so you can share your collections with your friends and colleagues. You can also make them public and share them with the world.
📱 Designed for every screen size, from widescreen monitors down to smartphones.
⚡️ Open source and fully self-hostable!
✨ And so many more features! (Literally, just didn't want to make this post too long. Check out theGithub repoandWebsitefor more info...)
If you like what we're doing, you can support the project by either starring ⭐️ the repo to make it more visible to others or by subscribing to the Cloud plan (which helps the project, a lot).
Things like mobile app (PWA) are already on the project roadmap and I'm so excited to share them with you in the future.
Feedback is always welcome, so feel free to share your thoughts!
Thank you for including oAuth options for sign on. Makes a big difference being able to use the same account for all the things like freshRSS, seafile, immich etc.
I’ve been using ArchiveBox, this looks a bit more feature-full than ArchiveBox although it seems like ArchiveBox has been pretty stable. Anyone have experience with both, can vouch for the pros and cons?
I may take some time to compare the two. After taking another look at Linkwarden I get the impression it may handle archiving pages differently than ArchiveBox, which isn’t a bad thing it may just not fit the usage of everyone who uses ArchiveBox. The presentation and UI look really good, which is something I find ArchiveBox suffers a bit from.
Amazing! Have wanted something like this for years, currently use raindrop but not fully, very hesitant of locking myself in. This looks very promising.
I can imagine that news orgs won't like having publicly available backups of their subscriber only content. Is this a problem that has been considered?
Also, somewhat related, are the plans to turn this a little bit into a P2P archive.org? I mean, if multiple people store snapshots of webpages at different times, the timeline could be rebuilt using their publicly available snapshots.
This is a fresh install as about 10 minutes ago so using the :latest tag which I believe is the v 2.4.8 build.
Signing up is possible and I was able to create my user account so that's a good start at least. :)