Pinboard (website)

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Pinboard
Type of site
Social bookmarking
OwnerMaciej Cegłowski
Created byMaciej Cegłowski
Operating income$293k/year (2023)[1]
URLpinboard.in
CommercialYes
LaunchedJuly 2009; 14 years ago (2009-07)
Current statusActive

Pinboard (also called Pinboard.in) is a social bookmarking website developed and run by Maciej Cegłowski. It has a plain design and a focus on personal management of bookmarks using tags to organize them, similar to early versions of the Delicious social bookmarking service.[2]

History[edit]

When Pinboard launched in July 2009, it charged an approximately $3 signup fee for new users.[3] This fee automatically increased by a fraction of a cent for each new user, a system intended to slow the growth of the site, to make enough money to sustain development, and to discourage spammers from joining.[4] A few months later Cegłowski released an option to save ("archive") copies of bookmarked web pages with a $25 yearly subscription fee, and Pinboard became his full-time job with 1,200 users.[5]

New users joined Pinboard at a gradual pace until December 2010, when information leaked from Yahoo! indicated an uncertain future for Delicious, which it had owned since 2005.[6] Many people reacted by joining Pinboard; it grew to 16,000 users by the end of the month, with a signup fee incrementally increased to $9.[6]

By October 2011, Pinboard had 25,000 registered users (including 18,000 active users) and continued to be a one-person company.[7] Additional users joined Pinboard in September 2011 after Delicious was acquired by AVOS Systems and relaunched with less of a focus on personal bookmarking features.[8] Following these changes at Delicious, many members of fan fiction and fandom communities switched from using Delicious to Pinboard, especially after Cegłowski solicited feature suggestions from the fan community and received a detailed and organized collective response.[9]

In January 2015, Pinboard switched to charging an $11 annual fee for new accounts instead of an automatically increasing one-time signup fee.[10]

On 1 June 2017, Pinboard acquired Delicious. Delicious users were no longer able to save new bookmarks after June 15, 2017. Delicious users have the option to export their bookmarks or migrate to a Pinboard subscription account instead. The ultimate fate of Delicious has not yet been announced.[11][12]

As of July 2020, Maciej Ceglowski announced on Twitter that he was "making some progress on getting Delicious back up."[13]

In February 2021 Maciej sent out an email asking users on grandfathered-in accounts to voluntarily switch to the annual fee structure, which had also increased to $22 per year, while the archiving accounts had gone up to $39. The idea being that the extra income would allow for hiring additional staff to take care of infrastructure and user support, while he was free to focus on adding new features.[14]

As of July 2023, Pinboard contained 283 million bookmarks for 228 million URLs.[1]

Product[edit]

Cegłowski said that he created Pinboard "partly out of frustration with a redesign of Delicious that I felt removed a lot of utility from the site,"[15] and the site includes Delicious-style bookmarking features with a personal list of tagged bookmarks and ways to edit and organize those bookmarks.[16] Users can install a bookmarklet button in their web browser to add a Pinboard bookmark while visiting a website, and they can import bookmarks from Delicious and other services.[17] Pinboard can automatically bookmark links from a user's Instapaper, Pocket, and Twitter accounts.[16] Pinboard also includes ways to view and subscribe to the public bookmarks of other users.[17] It can also be used via IFTTT.[18] Pinboard supports exporting bookmarks in a standard HTML format (understandable by browsers and other bookmarking services), in XML, and in JSON.[19]

Pinboard is supported by users paying for accounts; the site does not carry advertising.[20]

Publicity[edit]

Cegłowski speaking at XOXO Festival in September 2013.

Cegłowski writes a Pinboard blog on topics including new features, site growth, the benefits of paying for services in general,[8] technical aspects of running Pinboard, and critical commentary about social websites like Facebook.[21] Cegłowski has discussed prioritizing speed and stability over using cutting-edge technologies for building Pinboard.[15]

In December 2012, Cegłowski announced a project called the Pinboard Investment Co-Prosperity Cloud, offering $37 and promotion for six startup companies, to encourage bootstrapping technology companies with low costs.[22][23] He awarded winners in January 2013.[24]

He has spoken at conferences about his experience running Pinboard, including listening to users from the fandom community[25] and "failing really, really slowly" (working on a project for a long time instead of looking for immediate success).[26] He also gave a talk about the negative effects of advertising being the economic foundation of the web, as a model that encourages the growth of surveillance.[27]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b @Pinboard (9 July 2023). "Pinboard is 14 years old today! It's time for the annual postin'-o-the-stats, a tradition I neglected the last couple of years but would like to bring back" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  2. ^ Michael Arrington (6 July 2009). "Back To Basics: Ditch Delicious, Use Pinboard". TechCrunch. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  3. ^ Michael Arrington (12 July 2009). "Want To Give Pinboard A Try? You'll Have To Pay $2.84". TechCrunch. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  4. ^ Rafe Needleman (14 August 2009). "Get it while it's cheap: Pinboard's revenue model". Rafe's Radar. CNET News. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  5. ^ Jason Kincaid (12 January 2010). "Pinboard's Dead-Simple Bookmarking Service Is Still Going Strong". TechCrunch. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  6. ^ a b Erick Schonfeld (29 December 2010). "What The "Great Delicious Exodus" Looked Like For Pin-Sized Competitor Pinboard". TechCrunch. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  7. ^ Kristina Dell (24 October 2011). "Entrepreneurs Who Go It Alone — By Choice". Entrepreneurial Insights. Time. Archived from the original on 25 October 2011. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  8. ^ a b Charles Arthur (16 December 2011). "Goodbye Delicious, hello Pinboard: why we'll pay for internet plumbing". Technology Blog. The Guardian. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  9. ^ Clive Thompson (12 September 2013). Smarter Than You Think: How Technology is Changing Our Minds for the Better. New York, USA: Penguin. ISBN 9781101638712. Retrieved 4 February 2014.
  10. ^ Maciej Cegłowski (14 December 2014). "New Pricing Policy". Pinboard.in. Archived from the original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  11. ^ "It's the end of an era, as Pinboard buys and shutters del.icio.us". The Next Web. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  12. ^ Ceglowski, Maciej (1 June 2017). "Pinboard Acquires Delicious". pinboard.in.
  13. ^ @pinboard (14 July 2020). "Making some progress on getting Delicious back up. I figured out how to look up users and their bookmarks in the AVOS database schema, always a useful step in getting a bookmarking website online" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  14. ^ Ceglowski, Maciej. "A request for Pinboard old-timers". prettyfwd.com. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
  15. ^ a b Klint Finley (10 February 2011). "Hacker Chat: Pinboard Creator Maciej Ceglowski Talks About Why Boring Architecture is Good, and More". ReadWriteHack. ReadWriteWeb. Archived from the original on 28 December 2011. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  16. ^ a b Kevin Purdy (17 December 2010). "The Best Alternatives to Delicious". Lifehacker. Retrieved 11 January 2012.
  17. ^ a b G.F. (4 April 2011). "Price of fame: Stick a pin in it". Babbage. The Economist. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  18. ^ "Connect Pinboard to hundreds of other services". IFTTT. Retrieved 10 December 2016.
  19. ^ Steven Ovadia (30 September 2013). The Librarian's Guide to Academic Research in the Cloud. Oxford, UK: Chandos Publishing. ISBN 9781780633817. Retrieved 15 May 2014.
  20. ^ Clive Thompson (30 August 2011). "Clive Thompson on the Problem With Online Ads". Wired. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  21. ^ Audrey Watters (10 November 2011). "Strata Week: The social graph that isn't". O'Reilly Radar. O'Reilly Media. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  22. ^ Seth Fiegerman (18 December 2012). "Why Entrepreneurs Are Competing for $37 From This Startup Incubator". Business. Mashable. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  23. ^ Ryan Tate (14 December 2012). "Meet the World's Cheapest Venture Capitalist". Business. Wired. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  24. ^ Ryan Tate (21 January 2013). "How to Spend a $37 Venture-Capital Infusion". Business. Wired. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  25. ^ Matt Sheret (10 September 2013). "Notes from dConstruct 2013". Government Digital Service. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  26. ^ Ryan Tate (19 November 2013). "Why the Most Ambitious of Tech Startups Should Fail Slowly". The Next Big Thing You Missed. Wired. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  27. ^ Ethan Zuckerman (14 August 2014). "The Internet's Original Sin". The Atlantic. Retrieved 13 November 2014.

External links[edit]