Hoping to find something free and open.

  • Chris
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    423 months ago

    Bookwyrm if you want something Fediverse.

    Storygraph I think is the other popular one (I’ve not used it)

      • Vanth
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        63 months ago

        Also a Storygraph user. And I’ll add in praise for their migration tool that carried over my Goodreads data so I didn’t lose my history nor my to-read list.

    • @TheFunkyMonk@lemmy.world
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      83 months ago

      I’ve been using Storygraph for a couple of years now and love it. The only feature it’s missing for me that Goodreads has (although its implementation is awkward anyway) is the ability to add a note to a book you haven’t started yet.

      My workaround for now is a tagging system with friends names like #recommendation #recommendation-amy and if I want some more detailed info, I made a custom shortcut to transform a Storygraph share URL into a note in my book notes folder in Obsidian.

  • @illi@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    In case you use it for tracking what you’ve read and what you would like to read - OpenReads

  • @brandon@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I’ve been using Hardcover. Still very much a WIP and community is still pretty small but it seems very promising with a public api and ambitions to open source.

    • Well, they let me order my lists (and actually display the order). That’s good.

      No way to bulk add books to a list? Not so good.

      Worth keeping an eye on, though.

      • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksOP
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        173 months ago

        They could have destroyed me… by just saying “book clubs” but alas, they don’t keep up with the times, apparently not even Victorian era…

    • missingno
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      183 months ago

      You should probably double check whether you even understood OP’s question before acting smug and condescending.

    • @BorgDrone@lemmy.one
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      73 months ago

      Disregarding that you completely fail to understand OP’s question; physical books suck. We used then until a few decades ago because we didn’t have anything better now we do. It’s called an e-reader and it’s superior to dead tree books in every single way.

      • @proudblond@lemmy.world
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        53 months ago

        Can’t say I agree with you. Call me old fashioned but I like having the physical book. It lends a vibe to the experience that e-readers bypass simply by being digital.

        • @BorgDrone@lemmy.one
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          63 months ago

          The user-experience of physical books is pretty bad. They are bulky and heavy, unlike an e-reader you can’t keep 1000+ books in your coat pocket. You need an external light source, which limits where and when you can read. If you want to read a new book you have to go to a physical store or library (both have extremely limited selections due to the aforementioned bulkiness) or you have to order online which takes at least a day for delivery. With an e-reader I can pick a book and start reading it 10 seconds later without even leaving the comfort of my bed.

          Then there’s small things like full text search.