| https://tabler.one — Tablerone is a 100% private tabs, sessions, and bookmarks manager browser extension. A few reasons why you should check it out:
- Saving multiple/all tabs with one click
- Ability to open multiple/all tabs with one click to continue previous sessions where you left off
- Screenshot preview of pages Full disclosure: I’m its creator, but I’ll do my best to provide an objective answer. There are many different solutions to this problem. It really depends on which features are important to you, and which approach makes most sense to your workflow and mindset. Here’s a DB of noteworthy players in this space (in my subjective opinion):
https://www.notion.so/natannikolic/21debca9c9e7434c9c61b2996... Most bookmarks managers, especially (desktop) apps such as Notion, Evernote, Raindrop.io, etc. are limited to saving pages 1-by-1 and usually aren’t able to open multiple links at the same time. They tend to be hybrids between read later and notes apps. They use webpage content images for list-item thumbnails (which are less recognisable than webpage screenshots), and are focused on saving the content (images and full-text transcript), not to effectively work with large quantities of links in the browser where you need them. On the other hand, most tab managers (and neo-browsers) tend to focus mostly on managing active workspaces and always-on web apps, but neglect the bookmarking and ‘personal knowledge system’ angle of bookmarking. Usually this involves a sort of dock/taskbar inside the browser for switching webapps and a Home Screen dashboard for seeing your tab-groups-like workspaces. Finally, when it comes to privacy, there is a lot of confusion and misrepresentation. Here’s an example of what I mean:
https://better.raindrop.io/feature-requests/p/end-to-end-enc... Most vendors claim to offer E2E encryption — which just means that the data is sent across using the https protocol and the DB on the server is encrypted. However, this just protects data from unauthorised 3rd party breaches. The vendor itself still has the encryption key to the DB and is able to read users’ application data, i.e. your bookmarks. If the vendor offers cloud sync, it’s pretty much safe to say your application data is exposed, and subject to how much you trust the vendor not to snoop around or sell it. Which is why most of us offer local storage only solutions. However, Tablerone aspires to be the first one to offer a 0-knowledge solution (either through client-side encryption or blockchain storage) whereby we would provide the benefits of cloud storage and multi-device sync, but only the user would have the encryption key to read their data. Thus, not having to trust us, but be able to rely on privacy by design. |