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As far as I know, only clipclip allows you to save images and text, all with a kickass bookmarklet.

Example Clips

Collect writings about ClipClip

started by chao on Apr 25 2006 | 4 members | 28 clips | 0 comments

We're collecting clips about what other blogs and sites are saying about ClipClip. Maybe it'll help folks learn more about what ClipClip is about too?
  • 0

    Comments

    I am not a huge fan of clipping tools, there do seem to be a lot these days, but I found ClipClip worth the mention since it is so simple and for scrapping purposes it is effective.

    The idea behind clipping tools is pretty simple, you can highlight a section on the web, pics and all, click the ClipClip bookmarklet and your clipping will be saved in your online ClipClip scrapbook.

    You can use this tool quite productively if you are researching for a present, or for something else because you can clip pics, text and then later mix them up to form ideas. This is not the way I perform best, but scrapbookers will love the idea and using really is as simple as a few clicks.

  • 33006

    Web 2.0 You Should Know - web-hosting-newsletter.com

    http://www.web-hosting-newsletter.com/2007/09/2...

    clipped by chao Sep 25, 2007

    Notes by chao: Wow, a really nice review from self-appointed ClipClip Ambassador, Tiara Rea. Thanks Tiara!

    clip.JPG

    Okay, I saved the best for last, because I have actively been using ClipClip for over a year and I’m still not tired of it – in fact, I think I love it more now than I did when I first started messing with it. Earlier this year I declared myself the ClipClip Ambassador, because I really believe in the little app that changed how I bookmark.

    ClipClip is, essentially, a social bookmarking tool that allows you to save and collect the sites and stuff you treasure most. Like other social bookmarking sites, it allows you to create subjects, post information, and tag the stuff you bookmark for convenience. But unlike early bookmarking sites, ClipClip allows for one further step in development – you can ‘clip’ pictures, applications, and paragraphs without having to take from the whole website itself.

    ClipClip works, more or less, as your own personal scrapbook – in my ClipClip folders I have images I’m fond of, web hosting articles I think are cool, and snippits from various pages on everything from Web 2.0 to the iPhone to search results in Google. The best part is that how you clip it is how you see it – forever! That means while the look of a site may change or alter in the future, you have preserved a piece of it in your ClipClip folders. Funny enough, I clipped my first AmieStreet sale on ClipClip, used it to keep track of things for work, and also organized favorite images there for future artistic references.

    Well, these are just three of the great Web 2.0 tools you can find online, and three of my favorites at that! Check them out and comment if you’d like. I’d love to hear your examples of the best in Web 2.0 and your experience using the sites I mentioned above

  • Online scrapbook - ClipClip

    Offline, people are great at keeping scrapbooks full everything from knitting patterns to family photos. But Share, collaborative, bookmark, social, web 2.0 until now, if you’ve ever wanted to keep your own Internet style scrapbook its been tricky. It has been possible by grabbing screen shots, copying text and code, but these methods have always been far from elegant.

    ClipClip is like a big Internet scrapbook with added Web 2.0 social aspects. Sign up, add a bookmarklet to your browser, and grab a copy of the section of the page you want to keep. Share, collaborative, bookmark, social, web 2.0 You can categorize your clippings by activity, such as recipes, technical tips, girls I fancy, etc.  And of course, because it community driven you can tag your clips, search for ‘em and share them with your friends. It’s very new and in development, and seems to be a bit of a spam magnet at present, but none the less a promising and useful way of keeping interesting bits of web content.

    when you find something on the web, you can cut out only the most interesting part preserving the look and feel rather than bookmarking bunch of links.”

    So rather than getting caught up in archiving links upon links you get more for your bookmarking and tagging outlay. PLUS a little widget that sits on your browser so that anytime the fancy takes you it’s one click ClipClip. I think this can be very useful way to generate references you can aggressively share.