Popular Browser Extension Leaves BetaAfter a year and a half, WebSatchel is finally ready to take off the training wheels.
By: Nick Lambert "We are very excited to finally be out of beta", Igor Kuzmin Cofounder of WebSatchel announced on Twitter earlier in the week. "It has been great fun seeing our community grow over the last year and a half and we look forward to creating the best service we can for our users. There are many features in the pipeline which we think will make WebSatchel all the more useful to our users.". WebSatchel started out with just allowing users to save a complete copy of any webpage on the internet using their browser extension. Once the page was saved the user must visit WebSatchel.com and log in to view their pages in the "My Satchel" tab. People no longer need to be at the mercy of the fickle whims of the internet. They can take control of content and save it. Since then there have been multiple quality of life updates to the website such as additions of Tags to help organize the saved pages, an improved search bar, and collections. "We want our users to view WebSatchel as a kind of knowledge base," Kuzmin said in a recent email. "Users are building their own mini google with WebSatchel. There are other tools out there that might be able to save a copy of a webpage but that's not what we are about. Everyone should have a repository where they can store information that they find on the internet and keep forever. Not only keep forever but be able to search through it easily and find relevant information quickly." With all the recent updates it looks like WebSatchel is headed in the right direction. With a loyal fanbase and an unmatched user experience, WebSatchel seems to be finding a home and - more importantly - an identity in a landscape occupied by giants such as Evernote and Pocket. It will be exciting to see what 2020 brings for WebSatchel. End
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