π¨π»βπ»The best way to save links
Raindrop.io π§ is the modern way to store bookmarks
Raindrop is a terrific free tool for organizing bookmarks. I use it to save links for classes Iβm teaching and topics Iβm researching. I also save link collections to share with friends, colleagues and readers.
Read on for its best features, suggested uses, caveats, and alternatives.
Raindropβs best features
Easy and free on any platform
Download the Raindrop app for Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS, Android, or any browser. Once youβve installed the browser extension, itβs easy to save a link to any Web page and optionally add a note or tag for future reference. Bookmarks can have as many tags as youβd like for easy searching. Links can also be placed into a collection, which is basically a folder.
Pricing: I recommend the free plan, which allows for unlimited links, collections, highlights, devices, public sharing, collaboration, and integrations. It has the primary features most people need and thereβs no pressure to pay.
Pro: The $3/month option ($28/annual) adds a few fancy features, including:
Find duplicate or broken links in your collection
Search the text of all sites you save
Preserve automatic copies of each Web page you save in case the original site goes offline
Upload 10GB of files each month to store your own files, images, PDFs, videos, etc.
Share links and collaborate on collections
All your link collections are private, and you can share them at will. Display your links in a list, as cards in a gallery, or as a visual moodboard.
Add collaborators to a collection for a team or family project.
Publish collections of links that anyone can freely access without needing to use Raindrop or to sign up or register.
Embed link collections to host them on a website.
Examples: Public link collections Iβve saved
Revenue streams for niche journalism ventures. A curated collection of ways to make money.
Pandemic-era online events platforms. A catalog of the flurry of apps that launched to help people gather online.
Use AI to assist with organizing your links
A new AI organization tool helps with organizing your links. It will suggest a collection or tag for unsorted bookmarks, or a tag. That's especially helpful if, like me, you sometimes forget to tag or file what you save.
Integrations: Automatically sync links across platforms
You can connect Raindrop to other services so you can access links youβve saved later wherever and however you need them.
Raindrop can log links automatically to a Google spreadsheet or a Notion page. You donβt have to manually add them.
Sync links you save in Raindrop to Readwise, Instapaper or Pocket for reading later. You can also import links from those services to Raindrop.
Raindrop works well with IFTTT and Make (not currently
Zapier), services that link together multiple apps. [Hereβs my take on IFTTTβs usefulness]. Pairing one of those apps with Raindrop lets it automatically collect links to the songs you favorite on Spotify, Tweets you like, or videos you like on YouTube. There are more than 2600 total possible integrations. That makes Raindrop a useful hub for gathering and organizing all your favorite links from whatever services you use.
[Watch a 2-minute video excerpt from this post I made with Hypernatural]
Sponsored Message
Too many podcasts, too little time? Check out PodSnacks - The Blinkist for Podcasts!
PodSnacks offers the most efficient way to keep up with your favorite podcasts.
Select any podcast and receive an informative AI-generated summary of every new episode straight to your inbox. Never miss an update of the top tech, news, and business podcast again!
Export and import
Itβs easy to import and export links with Raindrop.
Export: Instead of dumping out your whole treasury of links, you can export just a relevant batch of links with a particular tag. Or export a link collection (folder). You can export the links as a CSV file for a spreadsheet, as an HTML file, or as text.
Import: Import links youβve saved easily from other services. Bring in links youβve saved to browser, Evernote, or apps like Diigo, Dropmark, Goodlinks, etc.
Sponsored Message
Wordcab One
Transcription, speech intelligence, and summarization, all in your VPC. Wordcab One is the only voice stack built for private clouds. Automatic fine-tuning and unlimited custom dictionaries included. Find out more here
π‘ Suggested ways to use Raindrop
π Organize project research
Park project materials in a Raindrop collection as you conduct research online. Save links into a neat Raindrop collection rather than printing out piles of paper or stuffing links into Word or GDocs. You can even annotate links as you go. Itβs a simple, free, fast way to create a private or shared digital project file box.
π§Ά Gather and collaborate on hobbies
Use it to gather links with friends. If you're part of a club, team, hobby or fan group, you can collectively drop in your favorite links, with or without annotations.
π©βπ» Share resources for a presentation or workshop
If you teach or give talks, Raindrop is useful for sharing presentation links or resources. Share one link to a collection and attendees can see all your materials in one spot, including all your links, videos, and a PDF of your slides or handouts.
Note: I usually prefer Craft for resource sharing after presentations because it allows me to create a complete visual document, rather than a resource list, but Raindrop works well when youβre mainly sharing links.
π¨ Create a mood board
For planning an event, party, or a renovation, Raindrop can be useful for saving inspiring images or links. The moodboard layout option gives you a nice visual view of your links with cover images. It also automatically pulls in the description from any link you save.
Caveats
Mobile app visuals. Images in articles saved to Raindrop β particularly in paywall publications like the NYTimes β may not show all show when you read on the mobile app. I prefer to read saved articles in Readwise Reader (see alternatives below).
Packrats beware. As someone who saves more than I find time to consume, I confess to a digital packrat tendency. Adding yet another storage hub like this can lead you to overwhelm yourself with an avalanche of saved stuff that you lack time to review.
Avoid duplicate hubs. No need to add another digital sock drawer if your organization system already works well. If you have a well-established system in Notion, Coda, Airtable, Obsidian or somewhere else, stick to whatβs working. Those platforms allow you to create your own custom organizational structure with advanced filtering.
Tiny team. Raindrop was envisioned, built, and managed by one person - Rustem Mussabekov, a π°πΏ Kazakhstan-based designer/developer. Itβs been around for more than a decade, but its progress relies heavily on Rustem.
Have hundreds of emails to catch up on? Check out last weekβs post:
Notable Raindrop Alternatives
Readwise Reader is my preferred app for catching up with online reading on the subway or airplane. (Why I like it). If youβre mostly saving reading material, Readwise is well-designed for both online & offline reading & highlighting. Tip: Itβs also good for watching + highlighting YouTube videos.
Instapaper, Pocket and Matter are also good options specifically designed for saving articles to read later, though none are ideal if youβre saving other kinds of links, like product pages or images.
MyMind is a much more visually appealing visual storage hub for saving materials online. Hereβs why I find it useful.
Fabric is a new tool Iβve been testing for clipping notable material I find online. Itβs aiming to create an AI-powered way to search all your materials.
Eagle just launched version 4.0. Itβs best for saving and organizing images and screenshots you find online. Hereβs what I like about Eagle.
Dropbox has a new feature to save links and screenshots. Thatβs useful for streamlined organization if all your files are already stored in Dropbox.
Well THIS was an extremely useful post for me and the work research for writing projects. Thank you Jeremy. I particularly appreciate the extra link at the end of each tool where you comment on how you use it. Smart.
I always enjoy your reviews. I have used Raindrop for a few years and have such a plethora of links I am not sure I can call it organized. Work to do! Thanks