Reclaim your online time

The internet is a vast and overwhelming place, filled with wonderful stories, videos, communities, recipes, GIFs and just about anything else you can think of. However, it can be difficult to stay in control of what, when and how we read online.

Today, algorithmic news feeds drive us into our own bubbles, just to squeeze an extra minute of engagement and then show us more ads. And that's not just one platform, it's everywhere - from social networks to shopping sites and newspapers.

When we do find content to read, what's usually the first thing that comes up? A cookie popup. Or even worse, a useless ad that has been tracking you over the web for a past week just to sell you the same product you've just bought.

On the other hand, because we have become addicted to context switching, we end up installing The Great Tab Suspender because our computers can't handle hundreds of open tab.

Believe it or not, between all of this noise, there is a really simple technology that can help us declutter our online habits: RSS.

Schema of RSS data flow
RSS facilitates delivery of content from different websites.

RSS enables everyone to subscribe to their news and read them in their RSS aggregator, in whichever way they want to. Without any personalization algorithms, trackers or even nagging notifications, RSS is a platform truly built for online reading.

But RSS and RSS aggregators are not without faults - they work great for websites that you already follow, but what about all the content you find online or that someone sends you? Maybe your browser can handle one more tab or a bookmark?

Introducing Linkship

Linkship closes that gap, it lets you ship links to your RSS reader even if they come from websites you don't follow regularly. Think of Linkship as your own read-it-later RSS feed.

Here's how it works:

  1. You find a link online or someone sends you one. But you're in your flow and you don't want to read it right away.
  2. So you ship the link for later with Linkship's Chrome extension or mobile app.
  3. Once you decide to check up on your news, the shipped links are synced to your news reader.
Screenshot of a RSS reader with Linkship feed
Linkship feeds are compatible with your favourite RSS readers.

There are no additional reader or bookmarking apps to learn or use, as your RSS reader becomes your only online reading space.

To make things even more comfortable, Linkship's RSS feed contains full text of your shipped articles, without the trackers or distractions you might find on the web.

Try it now

Sign up for a free 14-day trial at linkship.com. No credit card required, all features included.


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https://linkship.app/blog.rss