this post was submitted on 02 Apr 2026
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Thanks for writing that up! I'm curious: what makes you use Readeck for some things and Linkwarden for others? It seems like they have the same use case, and pretty much the same features.
I've been using wallabag for quite a while, before Linkwarden and Readeck were written, and I haven't felt a reason to switch away from it.
A thing I like doing with wallabag is:
I haven't found any other bookmarking applications that can conveniently tag articles in bulk, export, and then mark as read in bulk like wallabag. From the website, it looks like Readeck can, I'll have to check it out.
That's pretty neat. I don't use an e-reader and I'm not here proselytizing my workflow. But, to me, tools are usually best at one or two things, even though they might cover 20. That was my impression of wallabag. It had a lot of history and covered some niche workflows.
Linkwarden to me has one purpose, long-term archive and storage. So it has a different Restic backup policy since it outputs hard copies. It integrates with local LLM inference to tag and whatnot. I don't spend much time in its beautiful interface, nor do I use the social features. I'd be just as happy with a more minimal tool.
It's very helpful to be able to cite exact sources 10 years down the road, pulling from a hard copy. Especially with how fast the world moves today, the turmoil in the media and elected government.