![]() ![]() I believe it did this utilizing the html tags. Years ago I used a webclipper with CRM (contact management system) that would recognize if the text your were copying was an address, telephone number, email address and it would parse out the fields to the corresponding fields in the CRM. Probably not possible but I figured I would mention it:Ĭontact/ Address Capture: (My guess is that this is a pie in the sky) When clipping a page, it populates the following fields : Item Type, Title, Abstract, Website, Website Type, Date, Short Title, URL, Accessed (date), Language en-US, Rights etc etc. The application that I have used that does this the best with a website’s meta data is the open source Zotero ( specifically its Zotero connector), because having the page metadata is important for citation. It would be nice if more metadata could be included in the link properties. Personally I like it when metadata is carried over with the capture, however many web clippers only bring over the page title and the url. ![]() After a clip is sent, it also has the ability to send highlights to the link page in notion. However “Save to notion” provides the ability to create form/templates to send clippings to a specific workplace in notion. I know that there are alot of Notion fans here. Save to Notion ( 3rd part webclipper example) What is nice about it is that you can add tags, which it would be nice to somehow incorporate in Anytype. TagSpaces WebClipper | Demonstration - YouTube) Personally one of the best web clippers I have used is opensource (Tagging a file Tagspaces webclipper has pretty good functionality. I am also aware that this is in the works, but I figured I would share some thoughts for inspiration. I can’t wait for Anytype’s Web Clipper to arrive, it’d solve lots of problems for me - and hopefully, there can be some functionality for importing data from other platforms like Pocket.Īlso, preserving the reading position would be essential for Pocket-esque functionality I’ll shamelessly plug my feature request about that md files within Obsidian seemed interesting, but as Obsidian doesn’t have a good cross-platform web clipper that works across platforms, this also was a no-go for me. I’ve also experimented with using other solutions to serve this use case: Safari’s Reading List is decent but only limited to iOS devices, I never could get Wallabag to work, and other closed-source/SAAS products like Instapaper are not a viable solution for me. I currently use Pocket for saving articles and other web content that I want to read later, but my personal pet peeves with the app are the inability for permanent article storage (articles are deleted from onboard storage once you hit “Archive”, but permanent article storage is offered as part of Premium) and the lack of easy export and import of full article contents and data.
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