LINER AI Copilot, powered by ChatGPT/GPT-4 and Google Search, provides high-quality information to make your web browsing experience as enriching as possible. It's designed to help you get more done with less time and energy, offering features such as translation, sentence simplification, and in-depth exploration of text. Acting as a personal assistant, it's always by your side as you navigate the web, ready to assist at a moment's notice. Unleash productivity potential and save your time with LINER!
I imported my kindle highlights, as many others. Now I daily review some highlights (thanks to a dashboard, I am motivated). And where I didn't create highlights, as I only listened to the audiobooks, I get the highlights from others. It also allows to create beautiful quotes. It adds the book cover and matches quote and background with colours found on the book title! Really nice!
Based on our record, Readwise seems to be a lot more popular than LINER. While we know about 81 links to Readwise, we've tracked only 2 mentions of LINER. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I'm between apps at the moment! I would have used Notion except it wasn't possible to use the app on an e-ink screen. I need an app I can compose a synopsis on at the same time as export Kindle highlights to using https://readwise.io/, which narrows the options. I'm looking at Logseq at the moment. Source: 10 months ago
Very much agree that Pocket has gotten worse as I've used it over the years. It's so bad I've mostly moved to the much better Readwise (https://readwise.io/). I'd be fully over if they actually supported a decent export (see below). It's sad because I'm probably in the 99th percentile of Pocket users in terms of usage and am happily paying them for Premium. I can't remember a significant improvement to Pocket in 2... - Source: Hacker News / 10 months ago
I tend to read highlight and annotate using a Kindle, and subscribe to https://readwise.io/ to transfer my notes to the web. I would like to have the workflow to be able to write up summaries of books, if only for my own reference. At the moment reading my notes is like reading a book in itself. Source: 10 months ago
Some of the things I am doing include highlighting using a Kindle, and with a subscription to https://readwise.io/ downloading those highlights to my laptop. It's possible to automatically orgnanise them into chapters and sections. Source: 10 months ago
If it syncs with whatever notes app you're using Readwise might suit your needs. Source: 11 months ago
Check out tools such as Liner and Hypothesis to annotate webpages and keep track of your citations. I've heard good things about Zotero, though I haven't used it myself. Source: almost 2 years ago
Hi everyone, I'm starting my Computer Science degree today and I'm trying to optimize my setup/workflow. I've used OneNote but have experienced weird syncing issues. I've been looking into EverNote and Notion, but I want them to integrate with other tools and be exportable. I've been looking at these highlighter tools https://getliner.com/ and https://www.weavatools.com/. I currently have a nice gaming PC, Kindle... Source: about 3 years ago
Knotes - An efficient, beautiful Kindle highlights & notes manager
Highlight - "Highlight" physical books through conductive pages 📖✨
Klib - Kindle & iBooks Highlights Manager
Highly for iOS - Medium-style highlighting in every app and website. 🖌
Clippings.io - Organize the notes you make on your Kindle
Weava - Workspace to highlight, organize & collaborate on your research articles.