Hi everyone đź‘‹
I’m John Atkins, a product designer with 20 years of experience. Over my career, I’ve worked on everything from large SaaS platforms to niche productivity tools. Now that I’m retired, I still enjoy tinkering with small ideas, turning them into real products, and sharing them with others.
Recently, I found myself frustrated with browser bookmarks. I’m a heavy bookmark user — saving articles, tools, and references almost daily — but the default bookmark manager is clumsy. Long titles get cut off, there’s no clear “date saved” info, and finding that one link from “last Tuesday” is a headache.
So, I built a Chrome extension called Magic Bookmark. You can check it out here:
https://bit.ly/3UjCFeg
What it does:
Offline snapshots — See titles, icons, and last-visited dates even when offline.
Smart grouping — Automatically groups bookmarks by “Today,” “Yesterday,” and older, so recent saves are easy to find.
Two-line titles — More context at a glance, no more guessing what a link is about.
It’s a small, quiet tool that lives in the background, helping keep bookmarks neat without extra work.
If you’re curious, try it and let me know if it makes your workflow smoother. And I’m wondering — do you use browser bookmarks at all, or do you prefer tools like Notion, Raindrop, or Pocket to manage your personal knowledge base?
Top comments (1)
Thanks for reading! 🙌 I made Magic Bookmark mainly for myself, but I’m curious to see if it works for other heavy bookmark users too.
If you try it, I’d love to hear what small tweaks or features you think would make it even better. Here’s the link again for convenience: bit.ly/3UjCFeg