Last updated April 2026
A Bookmarking Tool Built for Developers
Save This One is a bookmarking tool for developers who save Stack Overflow answers, GitHub repos, and documentation pages but can never find them again. It lets you tag by stack or project, add notes, and search across everything.
Sound familiar?
You found the perfect React hooks article two weeks ago. Now you cannot find it. It is somewhere in your browser bookmarks, mixed with 300 other links. Developers bookmark more than anyone. Save This One makes those bookmarks useful.
How Save This One helps
Save from anywhere you work
Paste a link in the app, use the browser extension, save via cURL from your terminal, or trigger it from Raycast. No workflow change required.
Tag by stack or project
Tag a link with 'react', 'hooks', and 'project-x' at the same time. Find every React reference for a specific project in one search.
Search beats folders every time
Full-text search across titles, URLs, tags, and your notes. Type 'useEffect cleanup' and get the exact article. Faster than digging through nested folders.
Save fast. Find fast. Move on.
Three steps. No folders to babysit.
Save a link
Paste a URL, use the browser extension, or send from your phone. It takes a second.
Leave a breadcrumb
Add a tag or a short note so future-you knows why this link mattered.
Come back later
Search, skim, and reopen what you need without digging through old tabs.
Keep the link. Keep the context.
A saved link is only half the job. The other half is remembering why you saved it.
Tags that help
Keep related links together without making a big filing system.
Good example for the launch page hero.
ycombinator.com
Notes that explain
Write one short line so the next visit starts with context.
Search that works
Find by title, source, or the clue you left for yourself.
Common questions
Browser history only stores URLs and page titles. If you do not remember the exact title, it is gone. Save This One lets you add your own note when you save, like 'useEffect cleanup pattern for async calls'. Later, search 'useEffect cleanup' and it comes right up. Your words, not the page title.




