The time has come to unveil Grimoire, a bookmark manager designed specifically for everyone who is missing a little bit of magic touch when it comes to organizing their bookmarks.
Its mission is simple: to help you add, process, and organize your bookmarks in a way that makes sense.
Reasoning behind the project​
I’ve always struggled with organizing my bookmarks. Even though I tried many options, none of them really appealed to me. The built-in bookmark managers in browsers were too basic and didn’t allow me to organize my bookmarks in a way that made sense to me. The most popular external bookmark managers have been too simple, too complicated, or too expensive for what they offer.
What I liked the most was the idea of having a bookmark manager with a relational database I had access to. This would let me retrieve my bookmarks in any way I wanted, and I could easily add new features in the future. I’ve searched for a solution that would allow me to do that, but I couldn’t find anything that would fit my needs.
And that’s how the idea of the Grimoire was born. I wanted to create a bookmark manager that would be simple to use, but also powerful enough to let me organize my bookmarks in a way that made sense to me. Moreover, I wanted to take SvelteKit and PocketBase for a spin, and this seemed like a perfect opportunity to do so.
How it looks now​
Starting with v0.1.0, Grimoire has most of the basic features you would expect from a bookmark manager:
- bookmarks:
- can be added, viewed, edited, and deleted
- can be organized into categories and tagged
- metadata, like title, description, HTML content, favicon, and image, is fetched from the website and stored locally
- can have notes added to them
- bookmark list:
- display in a grid or list view
- can be searched by title, description, URL, and tags
- filtering by category, tag, and and more
- sort by date added, domain, and more
- users:
- can sign up and sign in
- all bookmarks, categories, and tags are private to the user
- admin panel:
- is used to manage users and see their bookmark, category, and tag counts
- can be used to preview most of PocketBase settings
- other:
- it’s dockerized, so it’s easy to run it locally or deploy it to your server
- all the benefits of a self-hosted PocketBase installation, like scheduled backups (local and to S3), high performance, and data security
- dark mode, because dark wizardry requires darkness
- responsive design as magic should be accessible to everyone, everywhere
- early and experimental support for AI-powered features (more on that in the future), like automatic tag suggestions
- and that’s just the beginning!
What’s next​
It’s still a work in progress, but I’m happy with the functionality provided so far. You can expect more useful features, like a way to import bookmarks from other services and export them to most popular file formats, public profiles, better admin panel, AI-powered features - just to name a few. For more details, check out the roadmap.
How to get it up and running​
If you want to try it out, you can run it locally!
Contributors are more than welcome
To make Grimoire even better, I need your help! Don’t be a stranger and check out the contributing guidelines today!
I try to test this out but having problems setting it up properly?
I set an Email and Password in all of the .env files and started the container with docker-compose up. But neither the admin panel or the normal login accept the credentials.
Any help please?