We'll import all your Delicious.com bookmarks and store them privately & safely for you right here. Note: This only seems to work with old-school Delicious accounts (i.e. Delicious accounts that were created before they merged with Yahoo). If you're not sure what kind of account you have, go ahead and try to sign in... you'll find out. Nothing bad will happen if you have a newer account (except you won't be able to use Spabba.com)
Packrati.us now supports Historious, Instapaper, Pinboard.in, and Diigo accounts.This site provides a simple bookmarking service. We follow your twitter feed, and whenever a status you tweet or re-tweet contains URLs, we add them to your delicious.com bookmarks. Optionally, bookmark URLs in @replies to you, and in tweets you mark as Favorites.
Social.com is a suite of social media contribution tools designed to help you spread your message to all your followers on the Internet.
With Social.com's browser bookmarklet you can quickly and easily send the page that you are on - even from Google Reader - to Twitter, Delicious, and Ping.fm. Use the Social.com WordPress Plugin and Button to drive more traffic to your blog or website.
End information overload. Focus your information diet.
Built to kill a cycle waster URLAgg leverages the power of the del.icio.us community to limit your information consumption to popular links in areas (tags) you care about.
Unlike other link sites, delicious is still at its heart a bookmark site. This means, mostly, useful links are being saved and, saved by a lot of people to hit popular.
You're a simple sign up away from focusing your information diet.
Qwerly is a whois for Twitter. For every Twitter user that is looked up on our site, we generate a simple profile with links to that person's other profiles on sites such as Facebook, LinkedIn, Flickr, Last.fm, Delicious and many, many more. This way, you can discover where your friends and other interesting people hang out online.
ow is it different from bookmarking?
historious is very different from your standard bookmarks, as you don't have categories, tags, names or anything else to categorize. Everything is generated automatically with one click of the bookmarklet, and historious saves the page as it is at that moment. When you need a site, you type a few keywords you remember from it, such as "blue sea", and historious shows you all the sites relevant to those keywords.
historious searches inside the content of the page, which is why it needs no tags or any other user input. Think of it as Google search for your history. No bookmarks to wade through, no items to clean up, just a search box.