![bookmacster sync bookmacster sync](https://static.macupdate.com/screenshots/278999/m/bookmacster-screenshot.png)
- #Bookmacster sync upgrade#
- #Bookmacster sync full#
- #Bookmacster sync android#
- #Bookmacster sync free#
![bookmacster sync bookmacster sync](https://static.macupdate.com/screenshots/279094/m/synkmark-screenshot.png)
#Bookmacster sync free#
And speaking of price, Evernote offers a free plan with a generous amount of features and monthly upload quota, as well as a paid plan with useful perks. Though Evernote’s feature set and, by extension, interfaces are different and broader than Delicious, you gain stability in the form of service longevity (Evernote as a company is close to profitability) and popularity, as it, too, is supported by a variety of third-party apps and even has a couple of dedicated third-party clients, despite its own home-grown app for iPhone and iPad. Evernote is billed as “your digital brain,” and the Web, desktop, and mobile clients the company offers are designed around managing not just bookmarks, but PDFs, task lists, images, and just about any type of file, too. It’s free for now, and I’ve seen it appearing lately as an option in some third-party clients such as Reeder.Įvernote is probably the next best alternative to Delicious, though its approach is different in a number of ways. I haven’t used it personally yet, but it’s a Web-based service with an emphasis on putting a face to your bookmarks’s names, so to speak. Zootool takes a step away from the heavily textual interfaces of Delicious and Pinboard, bringing a more visual layer to the experience while remaining focused on bookmarking.
#Bookmacster sync full#
Xmarks also just launched its full Delicious import tool for a smooth transition.
![bookmacster sync bookmacster sync](https://macx.ws/uploads/posts/2017-08/1502990726_bookmacster_03.png)
#Bookmacster sync android#
Almost all of the service’s most popular features are free, but if you want a couple of upgrades like a client for your iPhone or Android phone, or the ability to sync your open tabs between browsers and computers, Xmarks’s premium plan is just $12 per year. But Xmarks has a freemium model that’s tuned pretty well for all users. You may lose some of the organizational flexibility that Delicious (and other services mentioned here) offer since most browsers (and Xmarks, by extension) use traditional bookmark folders instead of tags. The company offers plugins for Safari, Firefox, Chrome, and even Internet Explorer, and you can also access your bookmarks online, just like Delicious, at. While Xmarks is Web-based, it is primarily a service for syncing your bookmarks between all your browsers and computers. Xmarks is another fairly lateral move in terms of features and familiarity, though with a slight twist. On the upside, that fee should go a long way towards helping Pinboard to keep the lights on better than Yahoo did with Delicious.
#Bookmacster sync upgrade#
The one potential downside for some Delicious refugees is that Pinboard charges a small one-time signup fee to cover server costs and pay employees, and a few premium features (like offline archives of Webpages) cost an upgrade fee. Plus, Pinboard already has steam with third-party developers, as a number of Mac and iPhone clients already support it, including Delibar and Reeder, as well as dedicated iPad browsers like Skyfire and Cyberspace. It offers a ton of features Delicious never did, like automatically collecting links you share on your Twitter and Instapaper accounts, downloading full copies of your bookmarked pages for archival and offline viewing (a paid upgrade option), and placemarks for map locations, not just URLs. Its Website is very straightforward and stays out of your way, and it helps you get over the first big hurdle with instructions on exporting your Delicious bookmarks and importing them into Pinboard. Pinboard is probably your best shot in terms of making the most lateral move from Delicious’s interface and features (I switched to Pinboard a while ago).