Hello everybody, Daniel here! We’re excited to be back with some new updates that we believe the community will love!
As always before we start, we’d like to express our sincere thanks to all of our Cloud subscription users. Your support is crucial to our growth and allows us to continue improving. Thank you for being such an important part of our journey. 🚀
Allows users to set a specific preview image for links, making them more visually distinctive and personalized.
Thanks to Phosphor Icons, users can now assign unique icons to both individual Links and Collections, each with thousands of unique combinations.
We added a new drawer to display a full view of Link Details, Preserved Formats, and Additional information.
You can now customize what to view and adjust the number of columns in the Linkwarden dashboard.
Special thanks to Marcel from Floccus, you can now sync your browser bookmarks with Linkwarden using Floccus.
Allows users to open all links under a collection in a new tab.
Thanks to all the contributors, we now support the following languages to make Linkwarden accessible to a broader, global audience:
Cloud subscribers can now add more seats and invite users who aren’t on Linkwarden from their billing page. Learn more about managing seats in our documentation.
Users can now directly edit link addresses without needing to create a new entry.
The Docker image size has been reduced by around 50%, optimizing storage usage and making deployment faster.
Check out the full changelog below.
Full Changelog: https://github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden/compare/v2.7.1...v2.8.0
If you like what we’re doing, you can support the project by either starring ⭐️ the repo to make it more visible to others or by subscribing to the Cloud plan (which helps the project, a lot).
Feedback is always welcome, so feel free to share your thoughts!
Website: https://linkwarden.app
GitHub: https://github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden
Read the blog: https://blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.8
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Do linkwarden instances federate, so that it can act as a decentralised way-back-machine?
That sounds like an awesome idea
Can it work entirely locally?
I have over 20,000 bookmarks that I saved going all the way back to the 90s. I’ve been integrating tagging ever since del.icio.us was launched.
I would love to check this out. How does this work with expired domains?
This reminds me of del.icio.us. I am curious to host this for my friends!
How does this compare to linkding, floccus, or hoarder?
Quick deploy and poking, in order: nicer UI; supposedly compatable (sync) but I couldn’t get it working; and no idea never heard of it.
The .env for the compose file is confusing and it slowed my deployment way down, but other than that, it’s pretty painless. The variable names are… not clear. Just delete all the sso stuff unless you use it, set a secret and a db password (no special chars, nothing beyond 100 chars, in my testing/struggle; at least for the db), change the url to your fqdn otherwise it will go to localhost when you log out, and disable registration after you have done it yourself. Import/export from linkding to linkwarden (and I assume vice versa) is fine.