VidNest - Turn YouTube Watch Later into a tidy, searchable library

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VidNest turns your YouTube Watch Later into a tidy, searchable library. Import WL & playlists, convert lists→folders, tag, filter, and bulk move/delete fast. Convert your Youtube caos into an organised Folder based system

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I hit that classic YouTube problem: thousands of saved videos in one giant list. Example: I had years of BJJ technique videos tossed into Watch Later—finding “half-guard sweep” vs. “north-south escape” was a nightmare. With VidNest I split them into folders (Positions, Escapes, Submissions) and tags (gi, no-gi, left-side, advanced). Now I can surface the exact clip in seconds. Other ways people are using it: Students/Lifelong learners: Split lectures & tutorials by course/module, tag by difficulty or exam topic, filter to >10 min when you want deep dives. Developers: Folders for React/Next/Go/SQL; tags like “debugging”, “architecture”, “short tip”; saved filter = “channel: Fireship AND <10 min”. Design/UX: Folders for UI patterns, motion, case studies; tags for Figma, iOS, accessibility; search by title/channel when prepping a critique. Language learning: Folders for listening/grammar/vocab; tags for A2/B1/B2, subtitles; filter to native channels only. Cooking & Fitness: Folders for meal prep, techniques, kettlebell; tags for equipment or diet; quick filter: 5–15 min workouts/recipes. Creators/Researchers: Keep a research backlog; tags for idea stage (inbox → outline → record); saved filter per competitor channel. Knowledge work: Talks/how-tos by project or client; tag SOP, reference, must-watch; bulk move stale stuff out of the way. How it fits into a weekly flow: Import Watch Later & playlists (or convert lists → folders). Triage your “inbox” into 3–5 top-level folders; add 1–2 tags that actually help you find things. Use search/filters (title, channel, duration, date, tags) to pull up exactly what you need; run bulk move/delete to keep it clean. If you’ve got a messy list (coding, MMA, recipes, lectures… anything), drop your use case below—happy to suggest a folder/tag schema that gets you from chaos to “found it” fast.