This one I have been sustainably using for almost a year now, so I believe it could be useful to many people.

I tend to be curious about lots of different topics so I'm subscribed to over 100 subreddits.

For the most part I'm reading Reddit passively and I can't afford spending much time on Reddit every day, so my system for years has been: reading updates for the past week on Sundays.

For few select subreddits that most interest me (e.g. quantifiedself or orgmode) I read all updates, for the rest I just read weekly top.

I tend to do it from my phone on the go/in transport or while I'm waiting somewhere, so the concentration is not exactly perfect and many things are too awkward to read or browse on phone anyway.

So I tend to favorite interesting submissions (judging by the title) without reading them instead, and later once in a while when I'm at my desktop I have a deeper look at whatever I favorited.

This however gets a little clumsy.

saved items can't be rearranged in the Reddit interface and the only sort available is by 'saving time' This would be ok if every time you processed your saved items you cleared all of them, but that's just not very realistic. Some things take higher priority; some things just give you few thoughts now and you wanna action on it later. So every time you process saved submissions, you end up going through same things all over again, and you have to remember where you stopped last time. That's quite distracting!

you can't add private comments to saved items Using some annotation engine like Hypothesis on 'Saved' page would be too flaky if Reddit changes design. You could annotate saved items directly, but then you won't have an overview on 'Saved' page.

sometimes posts/comments get deleted so if you look at saved item months later, you'd not know what have you saved anymore While there are ways to read removed reddit comments, it's a bit distracting to do too and with orger you'd always have an original version of the item.

How Orger solves that for me? Here's my typical workflow with reddit.org file:

I'm running reddit data exporter and reddit.py every night automatically (via cron).

every night automatically (via cron). when I feel like reading some Reddit, I open reddit.org and jump to new items at the end of file (I can quickly tell them from old ones since they don't have a priority), and go through them

and jump to new items at the end of file (I can quickly tell them from old ones since they don't have a priority), and go through them some things just get refiled immediately. E.g. if it's a recipe it would go to food.org , if it's something C++ related, it would go to cpp.org , etc.

, if it's something C++ related, it would go to , etc. what isn't refiled, I mark with a priority

when everything is prioritized, I select the whole file, call org-sort-entries and sort by priorities.

and sort by priorities. now that everything looks a bit more manageable, I can action on the highest priority items ( #A and #B ) properly. Some I just read and archive. Some give me thoughts or ideas which I can add under the corresponding org-mode heading. Some things just require actually acting on them (e.g. new library release), so I can mark it as TODO and schedule so it shows up in my agenda.

also, once in a while I'll look through items with lower ( #C / #D ) priorities and bump them or archive if they become irrelevant.

Needless to say when I'm searching through all of my Org-mode files, items saved on Reddit pop up as well.

The only downside of my particular implementation is that items are not unmarked as 'Saved' on Reddit. One could probably implement this with API call on archiving/marking item as done or something, I just didn't find it too big of a deal for me.

Here's how it looks for me (with content collapsed):