In short, it is one of the most productive bookmark managers around. It is designed to let you tag & categorize thousands of bookmarks in hours, not days.
The Pro version connects to Claude to let AI tag your data for you.
The only competitor is Dewey, but Dewey costs monthly what this manager costs annually.
The Chrome extension exports everything on your X bookmarks page to a local file. No login, no data leaving your machine.
If your account gets suspended tomorrow, your bookmarks are gone. This prevents that.
I also built a manager if you want to search, tag, browse, delete your exports like an actual library. Basic features are free, but you unlock features to make it a full-fledged manager for $4.99 / year.
Pro is $10.99 / year & it adds AI tagging with Claude. You can tag hundreds of bookmarks with one click that would otherwise take you hours manually.
React JS. Card processing is done through a Stripe affiliate. Comment welcomed.
The Chrome extension exports everything on your X bookmarks page to a local file. No login, no data leaving your machine.
If your account gets suspended tomorrow, your bookmarks are gone. This prevents that.
I also built a manager if you want to search, tag, browse, delete your exports like an actual library. Basic features are free, but you unlock features to make it a full-fledged manager for $4.99 / year.
Pro is $10.99 / year & it adds AI tagging with Claude. You can tag hundreds of bookmarks with one click that would otherwise take you hours manually.
React + exterior payment processor. If you want to support me, it costs almost nothing. Comment also welcomed.
I would add AI if I can get people to pay for the regular version as it is (where people just manually tag their bookmarks). Although with the filter, you can filter by a keyword and tag a bunch of them at once.
X is Twitter. You bookmark practically anything (post, comment, quote) and can find it later in one place.
I did put it together on a whim because I don't trust that something won't happen to X.com some years in the future with Elon and you legitimately cannot export your bookmarks from X. If that happens, your bookmarks will be lost.
Yes, it is a paid product because I put serious time into it and I designed it to be something I would use myself (even if I make no money off it).
Features are really simple. The annual license is $4.69 because I expect people to export their bookmarks only once every few months.
1. Chrome extension to scrape your bookmark page. You can find plenty of extensions that will do this, but they give you a JSON/CSV file that's not very useful.
2. The viewer is paid. You import the JSON from Step 1 and it loads all your bookmarks.
3. You can tag your bookmarks. You can download the media files embedded into each bookmark. You can delete your bookmarks.
4. You can export your bookmarks as another JSON that you can save or give to a friend (if you trust them with your private data).
5. I may add AI tagging for Claude to suggest tags for your bookmarks.
The Chrome extension exports everything on your X bookmarks page to a local file. No login, no data leaving your machine.
If your account gets suspended tomorrow, your bookmarks are gone. This prevents that.
I also built a viewer if you want to search, tag, and browse your exports like an actual library — offline, no account needed. $4.69/year for the viewer, but the exporter is fully standalone if you just want the backup.
It uses only React. If you want to support me, it costs almost nothing. Advice also welcomed.
How do you assess the consumer value proposition? I think everyone would want to know if the images and videos they find on social media are real, but who would find it essential to know and would be willing to pay a service like yours to get that answer?
Amidst a lot of analyses and results I can vaguely understand, this conclusion stands out:
We assess that Claude Mythos Preview does not cross the automated AI-R&D capability threshold. We hold this with less confidence than for any prior model. The most significant factor in this determination is that we have been using it extensively in the course of our day-to-day work and exploring where it can automate such work, and it does not seem close to being able to substitute for Research Scientists and Research Engineers, especially relatively senior ones. Although we believe this is an informed determination, it is inherently difficult to make its basis legible, given the model’s very strong performance at tasks that are well-defined and verifiable enough to serve as formal evaluations.
The ECI slope-ratio measurement we introduce in section 2.3.6 shows an upward bend in the capability trajectory at this model, though the degree of the upward bend varies significantly across dataset and methodological changes we made to stress-test it. The identifiable driver traces to specific human research advances made without meaningful assistance from the models then available. That said, we will be continuing to monitor this trend to see whether acceleration continues, especially if this is plausibly traceable to AI’s own contributions.
The bottom line: This new Claude model is not yet capable enough to autonomously do AI research — but it's closer than any previous model, and Anthropic is nervous about it.
What's the "automated AI-R&D capability threshold"?
Anthropic has defined a danger line: if an AI can independently do the work of AI researchers, that's a big deal — because then AI could start improving itself without humans in the loop. This assessment is asking: has this model crossed that line?
Why are they less confident than usual?
With past models, the answer was a comfortable "no." This time, they're saying "no, but..." — it's a much closer call. They're hedging.
The AI researchers designed tests to evaluate whether the model can do their real day-to-day work. They found out Mythos scored well on structured tests, but they know themselves that structured tests do not capture the non-linear, intangible aspects of AI research. So, interesting results, but AI can't replace them yet and AGI still far away.
Man could have kept low and build a nest egg until he gets busted by a functioning federal investigatory agency, but no, he has to stroke his ego and get a NYT profile and now his fraud is in the public eye.
https://x-archive.netlify.app/about.html
In short, it is one of the most productive bookmark managers around. It is designed to let you tag & categorize thousands of bookmarks in hours, not days.
The Pro version connects to Claude to let AI tag your data for you.
The only competitor is Dewey, but Dewey costs monthly what this manager costs annually.
Export and tagging are free & unlimited.