Linkstash V1.1 Released
I just released v1.1 of Linkstash.
It’s an incremental update—some minor fixes to the usability of the bookmarks page, plus a few bulk operations I was genuinely excited to build.
So far, I’ve had a dev server for Linkstash running alongside an instance of Linkding (which is still my main bookmarks repository) on my local network. I mostly used it for development. The browser on my home PC has the bookmarklet, and sometimes I’d stash random links into it just to have things to test with.
But with the latest changes, I finally feel ready to dogfood it properly.
I’m especially proud of the tiny UX tweaks — things around filtering, searching, just the general feel of the bookmarks page. It’s starting to feel like something I’d actually want to use, not just something I built.
As I write this, I’m setting up a public-facing instance for myself so I can use it both at home and on the go. That means I’ll finally be putting the mobile experience through its paces too, which should be… interesting. I’m already looking forward to the things I’ll run into and quietly fix.
So yeah, that’s it. Nothing groundbreaking, just a release I’m kind of proud of. It’s finally at a point where I can actually use it for real things, every day. Just wanted to write it down somewhere: Linkstash is finally starting to feel real.
