chrome extension · launching on product hunt

A wiki, slowly grown from your reading.

Save anything you read. Tabbase tells you what’s actually new — and quietly stitches the rest into a personal wiki you can search like memory.

· free to try· no credit card· export everything
tabbase
read in 12 min
📖compared to your 142 saves
Only 0% is new to you.
The rest is in your library. Read for the new part.
this disagrees with your notes
She disagrees with Pico Iyer on stillness.
open your Iyer essay
🌱
you have read this point
Chesterton makes the same case.
from your library
💡
phrase to save
"unchanged change-makers" — hers
new to you
or read it all
the hook moment

You stop re-reading what you already know.

Open a long article. Tabbase compares it against everything you’ve saved before and tells you the part that’s actually new — plus the lines worth flagging, and the things that disagree with your existing notes.

📥
save anything
One click in any tab. Articles, essays, blog posts, even YouTube transcripts.
🔎
search like memory
Semantic search across everything you’ve read. Vague queries work; you don’t need to remember the title.
novelty, not noise
Every article is scored against your library. You see the new ideas highlighted, the old ones folded away.
🪴
a wiki that grows itself
Topics stitch together as you read. Months later, search a half-remembered idea — it’s still there.

One price. No tiers to puzzle over.

Start free. Upgrade when your library starts paying you back.

Free
$0
for trying it
  • ·Save up to 100 articles
  • ·Search your full library
  • ·Novelty on every read
  • ·Export anytime
Add to Chrome — free →
when you’re ready
Pro
$12
per month, when you’re ready
  • ·Unlimited saves
  • ·Unlimited novelty + ask
  • ·Reflections (weekly digest of what you learned)
  • ·Priority on new features
Add to Chrome — start free →
questions worth answering

The short FAQ.

Is this just a bookmark manager?
No. Bookmarks are a graveyard. Tabbase reads what you save, scores it against the rest, and surfaces only the part that’s new — so the library actually pays you back.
Isn’t this just another summarizer?
No. Summarizers shrink one article at a time. Tabbase compares every article to your full reading history — so you see the part that’s actually new, not a recap of things you already wrote down months ago.
Where does my data live?
Each user gets their own SQLite database, backed up to Google Cloud Storage. Account deletion wipes both. Export anytime as plain JSON.
Which model does it use?
Claude Sonnet 4.6 across the board — distill, novelty, search expansion, ask. Prompt caching keeps the per-read cost low.
Who builds this?
One person — Jiho. Solo, profitable-first, building in the open.