Introducing Bookmark: Save Links That Last
Today we're launching Bookmark—an offline-first link manager built for developers and researchers who take their reading seriously.
We've been using broken bookmark tools for years. Today, that changes.
Bookmark is an offline-first, cross-platform link manager built for people who save a lot. Developers researching libraries. Researchers building literature reviews. Writers collecting reference material. Anyone who has ever lost a link they needed.
What makes it different
Offline-first by design. Your bookmarks live in a local database on your device. They're available instantly, no internet required. When you're back online, they sync. The link goes down? You still have it.
Tags instead of folders. A link can have multiple tags. No more forcing a page about React performance into a single folder. Tag it "react," "performance," and "work"—find it from any of them.
Rich metadata, automatically. When you save a link, we fetch the page title, description, and favicon. Add your own notes and tags at save time. Come back to it in six months and you'll remember exactly why you saved it.
Full-text search. Search by title, tags, your own notes, or the page description. Find that article about Redis caching even if all you remember is "caching."
Browser extension. Save any page you're viewing in one click. No copy-paste, no switching windows.
Mobile app. Your full library on iOS and Android, with the same offline-first architecture. Add links from your phone's share sheet.
Available now
Bookmark is available today in early access. The core features are free. Premium includes unlimited bookmarks, advanced filtering, and priority sync. Sign up and start saving links that actually stay found.
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