I've been working on mine on and off, tweaking and breaking it for years. I feed mine into a static HTML home page that's roughly based on the original index pages (e.g. Yahoo!)
My general categories are:
Libraries
Sounds
News
Health
Radar
Shopping
Movies
School
Tools
Money
Somehow, these seem to work for me. The automated side is fun to work on, but ultimately, I end up manually updating once in a while as changes are needed. I just added a page linked from the home page - Libraries - that leads to categorized "reading list" of articles, sites, things to follow / explore. That's where the real potential for automation is for me, and where I keep failing to deliver it just right.
I'm going to comb through Linkding for clews to my failure and my ultimate success.
I've been working on mine on and off, tweaking and breaking it for years. I feed mine into a static HTML home page that's roughly based on the original index pages (e.g. Yahoo!)
My general categories are:
Libraries Sounds News Health Radar Shopping Movies School Tools Money
Somehow, these seem to work for me. The automated side is fun to work on, but ultimately, I end up manually updating once in a while as changes are needed. I just added a page linked from the home page - Libraries - that leads to categorized "reading list" of articles, sites, things to follow / explore. That's where the real potential for automation is for me, and where I keep failing to deliver it just right.
I'm going to comb through Linkding for clews to my failure and my ultimate success.
The
> Low maintenance[...]A single Docker container, using SQLite as database. Automated migrations, zero breaking changes.
sounds nice. How does this compare to Linkwarden or Karakeep (formerly Hoarder) in terms of features? A comparison would be useful.