In a recent announcement, Xmarks revealed that it can no longer afford to continue operating its popular cross-browser bookmark synchronization service. Although Xmarks attracted a significant audience of users, the company was never able to build a sustainable business around the software. Xmarks cofounder Todd Agulnick says that the lights are scheduled to go out in 90 days unless the company can come up with a successful freemium strategy or a buyer emerges.
This is a disappointing development for those of us who rely on Xmarks’ excellent browser add-ons and reliable synchronization service. A number of popular Web browsers have their own built-in synchronization offerings, but none appear to be truly conducive to cross-browser synchronization. This inspired me to take a close look at the bookmark sync APIs in Firefox and Chrome in order to evaluate their conduciveness to third-party interoperability and determine if the potential exists for an Xmarks successor to emerge.
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Read the original, in all its glory, right here:
Ars examines Chrome and Firefox bookmark sync protocols



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