Oh hallelujah. I used Pocket solely as a means to get long articles onto my Kobo so I could read them when I had idle time, and was seriously bummed that they canceled it. I scripted up some stuff to pull new links from my GoodLinks app, convert them to PDFs, and upload them to Dropbox so they’d automatically sync to my reader, but it was janky and the UI for selecting and reading articles that way on my Kobo isn’t nearly as nice as the Pocket UI there.
I’m so glad this is happening. Guess I’m an Instapaper user now.
Its probably worth Th 60 bucks not to have to set anything up but I had Walabag running once, I think it was this. https://gitlab.com/anarcat/wallabako/
Wait... 60 dollars per year for a third party solution just to send articles to your ereader? I'd argue that's something that should come with the reader.
Great news! I feel like device manufacturers always tried to control the whole stack vertically and users were left to their own devices ;) to get desired workflows and integrations working.
I was actually a paying user at Instapaper, then Pocket, then back at Instapaper, and finally (and currently) Readwise Reader. Not sure this will drag me back over the fence. At least not yet :)
Mozilla seemed really determined to kill Pocket, once they had made the decision. I saw multiple other companies reaching out about trying to acquire/save Pocket, but as far as we can tell, nothing came out of it.
Seems rather dickish, given that they acquired the company in the first place. Not what I would expect of an "open source" company.
I hope if the Pocket guys ever quit Mozilla or are laid off, they'll be in a position to speak about what happened.
As for closed source solutions, I'd say Readwise Reader (https://readwise.io/read) actually innovated a little bit for the first time in over a decade by catering to power users, but I didn't use it often enough to justify a perpetual $10/month subscription (no free tier what so ever).
Wallabag 2.6.1 (released earlier this year) has improved stability, better article parsing via Readability, and supports EPUB/PDF export, though self-hosting still requires some technical know-how.
I tried to install it recently to a linux container running on proxmox. I gave up after half an hour because it requires a ton of PHP dependencies and there's no instructions or script provided to install them. I guess if you use the docker version it should be easier, but that wasn't an option for me.
I’m so glad this is happening. Guess I’m an Instapaper user now.
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