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Evernote Web Clipper

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Edited by Alex Surfaced·Productivity·3 min read
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The Evernote Web Clipper, developed by Evernote Corporation, is a versatile browser extension designed to capture and save web content directly into a user's Evernote account for later reference and organization. Users navigate to a webpage of interest, click the Clipper icon in their browser toolbar, select their desired save format (e.g., full article, simplified article, screenshot), add tags or a notebook, and then save it instantly to their cloud-synced Evernote notes. It functions as a browser extension for popular desktop browsers like Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari, seamlessly integrating with the web-based, desktop, and mobile Evernote applications. Its most utilized feature is the 'Simplified Article' clipping mode, which intelligently extracts only the main text and images from a webpage, stripping away ads, sidebars, and navigation for a clean, readable save. All clipped content is uploaded to Evernote's secure cloud servers, where it is indexed, made searchable, and synchronized across all of the user's devices that have the Evernote app installed.

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Why It’s Useful

The Web Clipper solves the pervasive problem of information overload and the difficulty of organizing disparate web content, transforming fleeting online discoveries into structured, searchable knowledge. A university researcher can quickly save relevant academic articles, blog posts, and data visualizations from various websites into a dedicated research notebook, adding notes and highlights directly on the clipped content for future citation. A home cook can effortlessly clip recipes from food blogs, saving them as simplified articles that are easy to read offline, and tag them by cuisine or dietary preference, building a personal digital cookbook. While Evernote itself has a free tier with limited uploads and features, the Web Clipper is free to use but requires an Evernote account. Premium Evernote subscriptions (Personal, Professional) offer increased storage, larger note sizes, and more robust search capabilities across clipped content. Compared to browser-native bookmarking or simple 'read-it-later' services like Pocket, Evernote Web Clipper offers superior organization with notebooks and tags, advanced search within clipped content, and the ability to annotate and edit saved articles directly. Advanced users can utilize the 'Annotate' feature to highlight text, draw arrows, or add comments directly onto a screenshot or a clipped webpage before saving, making it highly effective for collaborative feedback or detailed analysis. The learning curve is very low; most users can effectively clip and organize content within minutes, with advanced features like annotation requiring minimal exploration.

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