Hello. I’m looking for a software to save web pages from my computer and phone and read them later in my ereader device that has wifi connection and a rudimentary browser. Ideally, the software would turn the web pages into some sort of reader view mode to make them more fluid for the ereader, but that’s not necessary. I want something as simple as possible that I can host locally on a raspberry pi-like device. I don’t need long term archival or fancy features. Do you have any recommendations? I believe you’re the best people to know a nice tool for that job.

Edit: Thank you, everyone! I got a bit overwhelmed here, but I will check everything in my time.

21 points
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I would recommend Wallabag or Readeck. You can use Koreader on your ereader for reading article saved with Wallabag.

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3 points

I really wanted to like Wallabag. What held me back was the high percentage of pages it failed to scrape. So this is one area where I decided not to self-host.

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2 points

I understand it can be annoying but when it does I temporarily host a text version of the article on my website and save it from there

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3 points

I will check them both, thank you. I don’t think my device supports koreader, but maybe I can read directly from the browser.

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2 points
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Have you tried koreader? I have an old Kobo on which I actually used pocket, but I’m reluctant to try koreader again because I tried it a few years back and it was not a pleasant experience.

I’m hoping it’s better now…

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2 points

Yes I use it and it works ok for me. Maybe Kobo will consider official support for Wallabag now that Pocket is discontinued.

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3 points

I see hints that they may replace it with Readwise.

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2 points

Pocket just works. And now Mozilla is killing it. It’s a shame. There are even companies asking them to take over the software and support. So pocket will stay… Not sure how far that is.

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1 point

I’ve been using Wallabag for a few years now and really like it. (It’s the one thing I’m not selfhosting, though – I’ve been using their hosted service. But it should run on a raspberry pi with no problems.)

You can also export to epub, but you have to do that manually. OP, does your ereader run android? There are wallabag apps available, which are nice because they usually work offline after downloading articles from your wallabag server.

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4 points

It’s a tolino vision 2. Technically, it runs android 4 under the hood, but I would need to tinker with it via adb to run something else, and the small storage space available makes this not so appealing. I’d prefer to leave the complexity to the server and do the reading inside the browser in the ereader.

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1 point

Gotcha. The web UI in wallabag is nice and works pretty well with ereaders. It’s already black-and-white, although it doesn’t have pagination, so you’ll have to scroll.

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0 points

This!

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3 points

Linkding is a bookmark aggregator that can save pages for offline viewing including a simplified reader view.

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9 points

I use Readeck for ‘read it later’ type documents or articles, and Karakeep for data preservation. The only downside that I can think of with Readeck is that there is no real ‘one click export’ of the database housing all your articles. However, you can download the entire folder containing the database and all the zip files and transport them to a new server or make it a backup. Other than that, Readeck checks my boxes. It has an iOS app and an extension for Firefox…not sure about chrome as I avoid it like the plague.

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7 points
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Don’t forget about linkwarden

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6 points

I’ve been meaning to install ArchiveBox for something like this, though I’m not sure offhand if it’ll also save ereader-friendly versions.

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1 point

ArchiveBox strikes me as being a rickety pile of hacks, but it does mostly do its job out of the box. The built-in search is abysmal however and must be replaced with one of the other options to be useful.

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1 point

Their site leaves a bit to be desired, but they do have PDF versions along with many others it will scrape in

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