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itsankur | 1 year ago
I’ve invested more research and engineering into organizing users browser tabs than I’ve seen any other team do really. I’ve always wondered why big teams haven’t invested more time into this. They must have data that shows it’s not a profitable problem, idk.
Either way, 10 or more research institutes (including Harvard, CMU, and WashU) have shown how severe and widespread the problem of a poorly organized browser workspace and how detrimental it is to productivity. So I took a crack at building a tab auto-pilot system that doesn't require any pre-set categories, runs continuously, and is accurate across any topic. I didn’t build a new browser because viewing a webpage isn’t the problem—finding information nested in your browser and organizing your browser tabs into ideas and action items efficiently is.
The autopilot system handles about 80% of the initial browser tab organization that you either hate doing yourself. Then, I built a workspace that provides a better UX for organizing, ideating, and navigating your daily explorations and work online. We combined the two into a single tool and called it Peek.
Our AI autopilot system:
- Organizes tabs into suggested groups as you work. - Summarizes web page collections with one click. - Finds related pages from your browser history as you type. - Keeps related tabs grouped together.
With the workspace users can:
- Quickly prioritize, organize, and switch between tasks using drag-and-drop. - Add notes to topics, keeping ideas and tabs together. - Search across all notes and web pages. - Close and open all tabs related to a topic. - Save tabs for later easily from your browser.
So far, our suggestion system seems to blow Arc's "Tidy" feature and Chrome's Experimental "Group Tabs" feature out of the water. I'm curious how valuable an integrated workspace + built-in autopilot system like this is for HN!
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