Kinda sounds like Evernote web clipper to me...
There's also Tabcloud as a tab manager, good for closing a bunch of tabs and returning to them later.
Am I on the right track here, or is what you are proposing different from these?
We are digital librarians. Among us are represented the various reasons to keep data -- legal requirements, competitive requirements, uncertainty of permanence of cloud services, distaste for transmitting your data externally (e.g. government or corporate espionage), cultural and familial archivists, internet collapse preppers, and people who do it themselves so they're sure it's done right. Everyone has their reasons for curating the data they have decided to keep (either forever or For A Damn Long Time (tm) ). Along the way we have sought out like-minded individuals to exchange strategies, war stories, and cautionary tales of failures.
Kinda sounds like Evernote web clipper to me...
There's also Tabcloud as a tab manager, good for closing a bunch of tabs and returning to them later.
Am I on the right track here, or is what you are proposing different from these?
Kinda sounds like Evernote web clipper to me...
There's also Tabcloud as a tab manager, good for closing a bunch of tabs and returning to them later.
Am I on the right track here, or is what you are proposing different from these?
It is different from a web clipper, as I see it more like an advanced version of bookmarks where you can save any webpage. The key difference from other bookmarks available in the market is that we automatically organize and categorize the saved webpages. We separate the webpage homepage from its content, and automatically add tags to different types of content to make it easier for you to find and search.
This is our website, and the official product is still under development : https://markkit.in/
Kinda sounds like Evernote web clipper to me...
There's also Tabcloud as a tab manager, good for closing a bunch of tabs and returning to them later.
Am I on the right track here, or is what you are proposing different from these?
It is different from a web clipper, as I see it more like an advanced version of bookmarks where you can save any webpage. The key difference from other bookmarks available in the market is that we automatically organize and categorize the saved webpages. We separate the webpage homepage from its content, and automatically add tags to different types of content to make it easier for you to find and search.
This is our website, and the official product is still under development : https://markkit.in/
I love the idea! questions... will the saved page be available even if the actual website changes its content or url path?
will the saved page be like a pdf format, selectable text & images, with layout preserved?
honestly thats the problem that this tool might solve for me because what I find is that i had saved some recipe url & then when i go back to it its not there anymore...
so then now as a preemptive i usually screnshot it or download the images etc. then it becomes a disorganised mess be cause some of it is in pocket some in my local, some in pinterest etc.
the ai part is handy to have but doesn't apply to me as I'm still quite organised. so an opt out for that feature is indeed a must have for privacy concerned users.
also the data should be locally stored with option to connect & sync with cloud service of choice
Saving the snapshots of web pages is one of our plans. Personally, I have collected a lot of useful content, but sometimes, when I revisit them after a while, some of them are no longer available. This is indeed a significant problem.
Our AI does not involve any privacy-related issues. It solely focuses on automatically categorizing and filtering publicly available web page content. However, if anyone has concerns about the AI functionality, I believe providing an option to disable it would be a good choice.
I also love food and have collected many recipes. It's great to meet you too!
Looks like a nice idea but some people will be skeptic about uploading that data online.
Yes, so I have been thinking about this recently as well. Is it possible to utilize cloud services such as iCloud or Google Drive as the data storage for users, instead of relying on our own servers?
Yes, so I have been thinking about this recently as well. Is it possible to utilize cloud services such as iCloud or Google Drive as the data storage for users, instead of relying on our own servers?