Perch is an aggregator for all of the best writing on the internet (e.g. blogs, newsletters, substacks, etc.). We've raised $6M from Naval Ravikant, Alexis Ohanian's 776 Ventures, and a few others.
Agree on search being abysmal - I'm surprised that none of these readings apps realized that the right approach to this space is building an aggregator and solving discovery/search for all writing on the internet.
perch.app is the newest entrant to this space, and it's the closest I've seen to getting this right.
it's very good because it's simple and hasn't changed in over 10 years. you know it won't change, and it's the best $6.28 I've ever invested (but of course, I wouldn't pay for it every year; I would find another solution).
I'm glad people are mentioning Wallabag. It's open source and self-hostable, so it's not as likely to disappear on you. If you don't want to bother with self-hosting, there are some hosted options available: https://github.com/wallabag/wallabag/wiki/wallabag-ecosystem...
I've run Wallabag before but stopped around the time my son was born so I'd have more time to take care of him. And... I switched to Pocket. Oh well! I guess I'll switch back now, probably for good.
> the right approach to this space is building an aggregator and solving discovery/search for all writing on the internet.
This is not the right solution for me. Pocket was the perfect one, even in the first iteration. I don't want discovery. I want a personal box/shelf which keeps a list of what I want to read and what I have read. Permanent copies was a great add-on while it lasted too. Because I want the version I have seen. Not the edited/updated one.
Perch doesn't work the way I want. In fact, it's the direct opposite of what I need.
Perch is an aggregator for all of the best writing on the internet (e.g. blogs, newsletters, substacks, etc.). We've raised $6M from Naval Ravikant, Alexis Ohanian's 776 Ventures, and a few others.
Hiring 2 founding engineers and a founding designer: https://perch.app/careers