Use case

Bookmarking for research

Research means collecting more sources than you can hold in your head. Notabe keeps them organized for you — auto-tagged on save, grouped into collections, and findable by meaning when you need them weeks later.

Capture without the filing tax

Save a source and keep working — Notabe reads it, tags it, and reserves a summary. You never have to stop and decide where something goes; the library organizes itself.

Collections that form themselves

As a topic takes shape, Notabe proposes named collections from the sources that cluster together. Accept, rename, or dismiss them — the suggestions do the grouping, you keep control.

Retrieve by meaning

Semantic search finds a source from a description of what it argued, not the exact title. The Similar Bookmarks view brings back related saves you had forgotten — useful exactly when you are deep in a thread.

Frequently asked

How does Notabe help with research?

It removes the filing tax. Every source you save is auto-tagged, Notabe suggests collections once a topic takes shape, and semantic search lets you retrieve a source by describing it rather than recalling its title.

Yes. When you have enough saves, Notabe proposes named collections from what it sees clustering together. You accept, edit, or ignore them — nothing is filed without your say-so.

Does it find sources I forgot I had?

The Similar Bookmarks view surfaces saves related to whatever you are looking at, so older sources resurface exactly when they are relevant.