Prashant

send/links - Save, organize, and find your links in one place

Save links from your browser. Organized automatically. Find anything in seconds. Links get lost. Bookmarks pile up and never get revisited. Tabs stay open for weeks because you don't know where else to put them. sendlinks fixes that. Press Alt+L on any page - your link is saved, titled, and categorized automatically. No manual tagging. No folders to manage. Save privately with Alt+P. PIN-protected, invisible to everyone. Free forever. No credit card needed.

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Prashant
Hey Product Hunt 👋 I'm Prashant, a CS grad student and the person behind send/links. The idea started from a simple frustration - I kept saving links by sending them to myself on what's app, then scrolling back through days of messages trying to find them. Bookmarks never worked for me. Tabs piled up. Good articles got lost. So I built sendlinks. Press Alt+L on any page and your link is saved, titled, and categorized automatically - without leaving what you're reading. Some things I'm proud of: - Chrome extension with keyboard shortcuts (Alt+L to save, Alt+L+P for private) - Telegram bot (@ugotlinks_bot) so you can save from your phone - Private mode with PIN protection - Domain and timeline views to browse your collection - Weekly digest email of your best unread links This is my second Chrome extension after Netflix Comments. Built everything solo, completely free. Would love your honest feedback - what's missing, what's broken, what would make you actually use it every day. Try it at https://sendlinks.app
Dominik Bartosik

@prashantchanne this is brilliant, I'm an organization freak, but also I'll use a tool only when it's designed well - send/links meets both of these ;). One note: there should be an icon/button in the extension that opens the web app.

Prashant

@dominik_bartosik Thank you so much, this genuinely made my day.

Really glad the design resonates.

And that's a great call on the extension button. Working on it today and will push the update shortly💯

Dominik Bartosik

@prashantchanne perfect ;). I'll also test @Bypass later today, looks promising also!

Nayan Surya

I took a look at your website. I don't see any pricing plan there, but it doesn't say it's completely free, so it's a bit confusing. I really liked the idea and want to use it, but I don't want to know what links are getting attached to this. Can you explain a bit more on that?

Alex

@nayan_surya98 When I signed up, it said it was "Free forever"

Prashant

@nayan_surya98 Great feedback, really appreciate you pointing that out.
send/links is completely free, no hidden plans. I think that was leftover placeholder content I forgot to remove before launching, sorry about the confusion.

On the privacy side, your links are stored securely in your account and are only visible to you. We never sell your data, never share it with third parties, and never use your saved links for any purpose other than showing them back to you. Private links go one step further with PIN protection so even if someone has access to your account they can't see them.

Hope that clears it up. Let me know if you have any other question. Thank you so much

Takahito Yoneda

Having a dedicated search layer just for saved links is going to save me so much time digging through my chaotic browser history. Do you have plans to build out an API so we can programmatically push URLs from other apps? I could easily see myself hooking this up to a script that automatically archives interesting repositories my team drops in Slack.

Prashant

@y_taka That's exactly the use case send/links is built for, really glad it resonates.

An API is absolutely on the roadmap. The vision is exactly what you described - a simple POST endpoint where you can push any URL from scripts, automation, Zapier, or whatever your workflow looks like. Your slack to send/links pipeline sounds like a perfect fit.

I'll keep this thread updated as it progresses. Would love to have you as an early tester when it's ready

Prashant

@y_taka Hi, the API is actually live now, still in beta but fully functional! You can grab your personal API key from settings and start pushing links programmatically right away. A simple POST request and your link lands in your collection, perfect for that Slack use case you described. Would love your feedback on it and any improvements you think would make it more useful for your workflow. 🙏

Alex

Would love to also have a dedicated email address that I could forward links and articles to, because that's what I do in my current workflow, especially if I'm on mobile. I email myself links for me to read or check out later. Excited to give this a shot!

Prashant

@apcarpl Love this suggestion and you're not alone in this workflow. A lot of people (even me) email links to themselves as a quick capture method.

A dedicated save-by-email address is going on the roadmap. Something like save@sendlinks.app where anything you forward lands directly in your collection. Clean, simple, works from any device or email client.

Excited to have you try it out. Thank you so much for the suggestion

Brankica Stefanovic

I've tried Raindrop, Pocket, Notion databases, even sending links to myself on WhatsApp (sounds familiar?). None of them stuck because the save action always had too many steps.

send/links eliminates that entirely. Alt+L and it's done - no tab switching, no naming, no categorizing. The auto-organization is surprisingly accurate.

What didn't work: Telegram bot integration is broken for me, which is frustrating because saving from mobile is where most "I'll read this later" links come from.

Genuinely one of the most useful free tools I've found this year. Just fix mobile and this becomes a daily driver for a lot more people.Amazing! 🔥👌

Prashant

@brankis Thank you so much for the feedback.

Really glad the core save flow clicked for you. That was the hardest thing to get right.

On the Telegram bot - I just fixed the issue and tested it end to end, should be working now. Give it another shot with the bot and let me know if you hit any issue - prashantchanne121@gmail.com

On mobile more broadly, you're absolutely right that it's where most save moments happen. A native app is on the roadmap, but I wanted to validate the mobile capture use case first through Telegram before investing in a full iOS and Android build. Sounds like that demand is very real so it's moving up the priority list.

Thanks again for the detailed breakdown, this is exactly the kind of feedback that shapes what gets built next.

Brankica Stefanovic

Hey @prashantchanne , just tested the Telegram bot - works perfectly now, great turnaround! The mobile capture use case is definitely real, I think that's where most people lose links. Telegram as a validation step before building a full app is actually a smart move. One thought: when you do build the mobile app, consider a share sheet integration (the native iOS/Android "Share" button) - that would make it truly frictionless on mobile, no app switching needed. Looking forward to seeing where this goes. 🚀

Nourhan AbdAllah
i currently do the same thing (send links to myself on whatsapp and/or save to bookmarks) and i end up totally forgetting about them so im certain this is going to be super helpful, cant wait to give it a try. one question tho, are you planning to make this an extension on firefox as well or will you be sticking with chrome for now? and congrats on the launch!!
Prashant

@nourhan_abdallah Thank you so much, this made my day! Would mean the world if you recommended it to friends or colleagues who might find it useful 🙏

To answer your question - yes, Firefox and Microsoft Edge extension stores are both in the pipeline! You can actually load the Chrome extension in Firefox right now using the Chrome Web Store. Give it a try and let me know how it goes!

Thanks again

Ryan W. McClellan, MS

The WhatsApp-to-yourself pipeline for saving links is painfully relatable — I have definitely done the same thing, along with emailing links to myself and leaving seventeen tabs open for weeks pretending I will read them later.

The auto-categorization without manual tagging is the part that gets me. Every other bookmarking tool eventually dies because maintaining the folder structure becomes a second job. Removing that friction entirely is the right call.

I have my coffee; I can't have my breakfast.

Curious whether you are planning any kind of collaborative or sharing layer down the road, or if the intentional direction to keep this strictly personal and private?

Prashant

@ryanwmcc1 This made me smile:) Thank you.
You've perfectly described why I built this - the folder maintenance problem is exactly why every bookmarking app I tried eventually became a graveyard. Auto-categorization was non-negotiable from day one.

Also, great question, the personal and private experience is the core - that will never change. But a sharing layer is definitely part of the vision.

The idea is public profiles or pages and curated link collections you can share with the world, like a personal reading list others can follow and discover. Think Pinterest boards but for articles, tools, and resources.
Completely opt-in, everything private by default.

Thanks again