Content-types

The AI workspace for your bookmarks and links

Save any link with one click and find it later by meaning. Bookmarks that are searchable, not forgotten.

Bookmarks are promises you make to your future self and almost never keep. You find something useful, you save the link, and you never see it again. The browser bookmark folder is a graveyard of good intentions: hundreds of links organised into a structure you created once and abandoned, or not organised at all. Links saved in Slack messages sink below the scroll. Links in email threads disappear into the archive. Links in note apps sit as bare URLs with no context and no content. You know you saved something about this topic. You can't find it because bookmarks are just addresses, and addresses don't tell you what's inside. When the page goes offline, the bookmark dies entirely.

Fabric saves the content behind every link, not just the URL, and makes it searchable by meaning. The page you bookmarked six months ago is findable by describing what it was about, even if you've forgotten the title, the site, and when you saved it. Bookmarks become a searchable library rather than a graveyard.


Save the content, not just the URL

A browser bookmark saves an address. If the page changes or goes offline, the bookmark is worthless. Fabric's web clipper saves the actual content of the page: the text, the images, the structure. The saved version is in your library regardless of what happens to the original URL. The knowledge is captured, not just pointed at.

One click on any page. The content is saved, indexed, and searchable. Close the tab. The link is no longer a promise. It's a kept one.

On mobile, share any link to Fabric from your phone's share sheet via the mobile app. Forward a link from email to email-to-note. Use quick capture from a keyboard shortcut. Every path takes seconds and captures content, not just a URL.


Find any saved link by meaning

The reason bookmarks go unused is that finding a specific one means remembering something precise: the title, the site, the folder you put it in, the date you saved it. If you can't remember any of those, the bookmark is lost in a list.

AI search reads the content of every saved page and searches by meaning. Ask "that article about decision fatigue in product design" or "the documentation page about API rate limiting" or "the recipe with the tahini dressing" and find it by what the page was about, not by its URL or title. The search works across every saved link in your library, alongside your notes, documents, and other content.

The AI assistant works from your saved links too. Ask it to summarise a saved page, compare two resources, or pull together everything you've bookmarked on a topic across weeks of saving. Your bookmarks become a queryable knowledge base rather than a list.


Organised without you organising

Nobody maintains bookmark folders. The effort of categorising every link is disproportionate to the speed of saving one, so the folders break down within weeks and everything lands in an unsorted list.

Smart organization automatically tags and categorises saved links based on their content. Articles, documentation, tools, references, and resources cluster by topic without manual filing. The organisation happens as a byproduct of saving, not as a separate chore.

The explorer gives you a spatial view of your saved links, showing clusters and connections by topic. Browse your library by meaning rather than by date or folder. Discover links you'd forgotten alongside the ones you're looking for.


Read and annotate when you're ready

Many saved links are things you want to read but didn't have time for when you found them. In a bookmark folder, they sit as URLs in a list you'll never scroll through. In Fabric, they're saved with their content and readable in the reader, a clean, distraction-free reading experience with read time estimates and progress syncing across devices.

Annotate the web lets you highlight and comment on web pages directly in your browser. The annotations persist across sessions and devices and are searchable in your library. You can also annotate saved pages within Fabric, adding highlights and notes that become part of the searchable record.

The reading and the saving happen in the same system. What you've annotated is findable when you need it.


Subscribe instead of bookmarking repeatedly

If you find yourself bookmarking the same sites over and over, RSS feeds let you subscribe to the source. New content from blogs, publications, and documentation sites arrives in your workspace automatically. No repeated bookmarking. No checking whether a site has published something new. The content comes to you.

Combine RSS subscriptions with saved links and your library grows from two directions: the things you actively save and the things that arrive from your subscriptions. Both are searchable the same way.


Connected to everything else

A bookmark in a browser folder is isolated. A link in Fabric lives alongside your notes, documents, PDFs, voice memos, and every other content type. When you search for a concept, results come from saved links, your own notes, and your documents together. The article you bookmarked and the note you wrote about the same topic are findable in the same query.

This connectivity is what turns bookmarks from a list into a knowledge system. A saved link about a methodology connects to the project where you applied it. A bookmarked resource connects to the notes where you referenced it. The explorer surfaces these relationships automatically.


Who uses Fabric for bookmarks

Bookmarks are universal, but some people save more than others. Tab hoarders save links to finally close their tabs. Developers bookmark documentation, tools, and technical references. Researchers save papers, articles, and resources for research projects. Writers collect references and inspiration. Students save course resources and study material. Indie hackers bookmark competitor pages, product inspiration, and technical documentation. Anyone building a reading library or a second brain.

For structured approaches to managing what you save, see the guides to building a second brain and the commonplace book.


Get started

Save links that you'll actually find again, and stop losing bookmarks to folders you never open. Try Fabric free.

Get the web clipper for one-click saving from your browser. Comparing tools? See why people choose Fabric as the best web clipper, the best read-it-later app, and the best Pocket alternative. See how Fabric compares to Raindrop.


FAQs

Does Fabric save the page content or just the URL?

Fabric saves the actual content of the page, not just the link. The text, images, and structure are captured and searchable. If the original page goes offline, your saved version is still there.

Can I find a saved link by describing what it was about?

Yes. AI search reads the content of every saved page and searches by meaning. Describe the topic and find the page, even if you can't remember the title, the site, or when you saved it.

How do I save a link?

The web clipper saves any page with one click from your browser. On mobile, share any link to Fabric from the share sheet. You can also forward links to email-to-note or use quick capture.

Can the AI summarise a saved page?

Yes. The AI assistant can summarise any saved page, compare resources, or pull together everything you've bookmarked on a topic.

Are saved links automatically organised?

Yes. Smart organization tags and categorises saved links by content. Articles, documentation, tools, and references cluster without manual filing.

Can I read saved pages in Fabric?

Yes. The reader provides a clean, distraction-free reading experience for saved content with read time estimates and cross-device progress syncing.

Can I annotate web pages?

Yes. Annotate the web lets you highlight and comment on pages in your browser. Annotations persist across sessions and devices and are searchable in your library.

Can I subscribe to sites instead of bookmarking them repeatedly?

Yes. RSS feeds deliver new content from your favourite sources directly to your workspace.

Can I search across saved links and my other content together?

Yes. Saved links are searchable alongside your notes, documents, PDFs, and every other content type. A bookmarked article and the note you wrote about it are findable in the same search.

What happens if the original page goes offline?

Your saved version is still in your library, fully searchable. Fabric captures the content at the time you save it.

How is this different from browser bookmarks?

Browser bookmarks save a URL. Fabric saves the content and makes it searchable by meaning, with automatic organisation, annotations, an AI assistant, and connection to your other materials. The difference is between a list of addresses and a searchable library of everything you've saved from the web.

How is this different from Raindrop or Pocket?

Raindrop and Pocket are dedicated bookmark and read-it-later tools. Fabric is a full workspace where saved links live alongside your notes, documents, voice memos, and everything else, all searchable by meaning with AI that synthesises across them. The bookmarks are part of a larger knowledge system, not a standalone list.

Are my saved links private?

Yes. Your content is encrypted and only visible to you unless you choose to share it. Fabric uses AES-256 encryption and is CASA Tier 2 compliant.

The workspace that thinks with you.
Ready when you are.

The workspace that thinks with you.

Ready when you are.