{
"path": "/posts/2024/switching-from-pocket-to-raindrop/index",
"site": "at://did:plc:mracrip6qu3vw46nbewg44sm/site.standard.publication/self",
"tags": [
"pocket",
"raindrop",
"bookmarks"
],
"$type": "site.standard.document",
"title": "Switching From Pocket to Raindrop for bookmarks",
"updatedAt": "2024-06-05T16:12:01.000Z",
"publishedAt": "2024-06-05T16:12:01.000Z",
"textContent": "I've been using Pocket for a long time to keep track of things on the web that I want to read later.\nI save articles on my mobile or from my browser, then revisit them, usually on my desktop.\nSome articles I get to quickly.\nOthers remain in the stack for a long time and can become stale.\nPeriodically, I scan through everything I've saved and do a bit of house cleaning.\n\nRecently, Pocket stopped supporting their desktop app and now ships the mobile version of the app on the desktop using Catalyst (or something similar).\nI'm sad to say it, but I didn't like this change.\nThis was the first bit of friction.\nMore recently, I've started to refine my reading and writing workflows.\nOne specific need I had was to see the date on which I saved an article.\nPocket didn't seem to have an easy solution to this problem.\nI started looking for alternatives.\n\nThe main options I considered were Instapaper and Raindrop.\nMy requirements were:\n\n- Ability to save articles from mobile\n- Ability to save articles from a browser\n- Ability to see the date I saved an article\n- A nice reader mode on desktop\n\nNice to have:\n\n- An API to view the articles I've saved and any metadata\n- Nice reader on mobile\n\nWhy I chose Raindrop\n\nBoth Instapaper and Raindrop both met my requirements.\nWhat truly convinced me to choose Raindrop was the capability to add extra metadata such as notes and tags on iOS when I save an article.\n\n!Saving an article with Raindrop on iOS\n\nI anticipate this will be useful for creating log posts about things I enjoyed reading -- something I do now, but didn't do when I started using Pocket.\nIn contrast, Instapaper just saves the link immediately (a behavior closer to Pocket's).\nI didn't really think about these features as \"missing\" when I was using Pocket, but now that I have the option, I'm taking it.\n\nMigrating my data from Pocket\n\nInitially, I was hesitant to try and import my old Pocket saves because there are years of accumulated data.\nI decided to go ahead and do it because in the past, whenever I've done a wholesale data purge, I've usually regretted it later.\nTo complete this process, I exported my Pocket saves and imported them into Raindrop.\nThe links are imported into Raindrop in folders called \"Unread\" and \"Read Archive\".\nI don't have the bandwidth to review or sort these now, but I want them to be available for when I do.\nWith that, I've fully transitioned from Pocket to Raindrop.\n\nPocket had the data I needed\n\nIronically, the html file I exported from Pocket seems to contain the timestamp I was looking for.\n\nUnfortunately, Pocket doesn't seem to expose this in an easy-to-find way in their UI.\n\nIt's the end of an era for me, but I am grateful to the Pocket/Mozilla team who supported the app for as long as I used it, and Rustem, who built Raindrop and has made onboarding seamless.",
"canonicalUrl": "https://www.danielcorin.com/posts/2024/switching-from-pocket-to-raindrop/index"
}