In this post i want to showcase 15 alternative bookmarking sites to replace delicious. Don’t forget to subscribe.
1. Pinboard.in
Pinboard is a fast, low-noise bookmarking site.Take a tour of the site to see whether it meets your needs.Should you switch from delicious? We have arguments for and against!
2. Evernote
Evernote makes it easy to remember things big and small from your notable life using your computer, phone, and the web.
3. Zootool
Zootool is about collecting, organizing and sharing your favorite images, videos, documents and links from all over the internet.
4. Blinklist
BlinkList is a powerful productivity tool that makes is much easier for anyone to share and save their links for later.
5. Connotea
Saving references in Connotea is quick and easy. You do it by saving a link to a web page for the reference, whether that be the PubMed entry, the publisher’s PDF, or even an Amazon product page for a book. Connotea will, wherever possible, recognise the reference and automatically add in the bibliographic information for you.
6. Diigo
Diigo provides a browser add-on that can really improve your research productivity. As you read on the web, instead of just bookmarking, you can highlight portions of web pages that are of particular interest to you. You can also attach sticky notes to specific parts of web pages. Unlike most other web “highlighters” that merely clip, Diigo highlights and sticky notes are persistent in the sense that whenever you return to the original web page, you will see your highlights and sticky notes superimposed on the original page, just what you would expect if you highlighted or wrote on a book!
7. Faves
This is not a pure bookmarking site, but a site that acts as a combination of, say, Delicious and Google Reader. When you register, Faves.com installs its toolbar in your browser and that’s how you save content
8. Historious
historious saves you time by helping you find webpages you saw before. Bookmark sites with a single click, then find them again by searching for any word in the content of the page!
9. Instapaper
Instapaper facilitates easy reading of long text content.We discover web content throughout the day, and sometimes, we don’t have time to read long articles right when we find them. Instapaper allows you to easily save them for later, when you do have time, so you don’t just forget about them or skim through them.
10. Bookmark2
Bookmarks2 is a powerful productivity tool that makes is much easier for anyone to save their links for later.
11. Brainify
Brainify is academic social bookmarking and networking for college and university students. If you are looking for the best sites and a great community to help with your courses, this is the place for you.
12. Mister Wong
Make bookmarks publically available or keep them private. Search for subjects on tags. It’s designed as a social bookmarking system and it’s free.
13. Netvibes
Netvibes isn’t a bookmarking resource, but you can make it into one. It has a very useful bookmark option that allows you to import bookmarks, and you can tag them and make them quickly available.
14. Skloog
Using Skloog, you can easily create shortcuts to all of your favorite sites; bookmark pages that you’d like to refer back to in the future; and organize and arrange all of this information so that you can access it instantaneously.
 15. Squidoo
Squidoo allows you to create pages of content, with appropriate subsections and using their bookmarklet tool add content in as you need to.It’s more of a published page to which you add your own content, but it’s an interesting alternative.
There is also Utopic (http://utopic.me/) where visual social bookmarking meets content discovery via friends and relevant people and topics. You get browser extensions (Chrome, Firefox and generic Javascript for IE, Safari and Opera) to quickly save any web page to Utopic with just one click. All your links are automatically tagged (manual editing is super-easy!) with keywords to categorize and find them fast later.
Utopic profile also automatically collects and publishes all the links you’ve shared or favourited on Twitter, Facebook, Youtube and Google Reader (with more to come). Utopic processes over 600 thousand unique content items per day, tagging them with tens of thousands of keywords.