Marqly 5.0 - Your AI-powered bookmark manager
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Marqly is an AI-powered bookmark manager that automatically organizes your saved links using intelligent tagging, categorization, and semantic search. Save articles, videos, docs, and websites from any device, then find them instantly using natural language instead of folders and manual sorting. With AI summaries, reader mode, cross-platform sync, offline access, and smart organization, Marqly helps you build a searchable knowledge library without the maintenance.


Replies
Marqly
@marqlyΒ Congrats! Bookmark managers tend to win or lose on retrieval, not on capture. Capture is solved by the browser. The question Marqly's positioning needs to answer is what happens 8 months in when I have 2k saved items: do I get my way back to the right highlight in 5 seconds, or does it become another graveyard tab? That's the gap most of this category falls into.
Build Check
Hehe it's super cool! My bookmarks are going out of control so It's absolutely needed! I'm sure many founders like me gonna be more than happy with this! Wish you all the best
Marqly
@german_merlo1Β Thank you! π That's exactly why we built it. At some point bookmarks stop being organized and start becoming a graveyard of links. Hopefully Marqly helps with that. Really appreciate the support!
Anyone switched from traditional bookmark managers?
Marqly
@nithin_raju1Β Yep. Most bookmark managers eventually become storage closets. People save thousands of links and rarely find them again. Marqly focuses on helping you actually retrieve and use what you save, with AI organization and search doing most of the heavy lifting.
The description says it "automatically organizes" via intelligent tagging and categorization β but how correction works matters a lot. If it mis-tags something, can you override the tag and does it learn from that correction, or does the auto-classification pipeline ignore user feedback?
Semantic search over saved links is the right call. Natural language queries are actually how people think about their saved content, not folder paths. We've built similar auto-classification pipelines and the gnarly part is always content behind auth walls or JS-rendered pages. How does the AI tagging handle bookmarks where the actual page content isn't accessible at save time? Does it fall back to URL and title signals only?
Marqly
@anand_thakkar1Β Exactly. When content is accessible, we use the page content for much richer tagging and search. If it's behind an auth wall, heavily JS-rendered, or otherwise unavailable at save time, we gracefully fall back to signals like the URL, title, metadata, domain, and any available context. Not perfect, but usually enough to classify the bookmark reasonably well until more content becomes available later.
Is there an option to directly import bookmarks from the Chrome favorites folder?
Marqly
@lxcongΒ Yes, you can export your bookmarks and easily import them into Marqly.