Tired of using Copy and Paste or adding Bookmarks? Want a better way to use and share your online findings? Do you believe that information is easier and more enjoyable to digest in small portions? Clipmarks can take you beyond basic bookmarks by giving you a simple tool for grabbing content from Web sites, clipping the great moments you experience on the web. You can now clip the best parts of web pages and save and share your clips without having to bookmark the entire page.
You can also save it directly to your blog or send it via e-mail. This free browser add-on lets you clip text, images and videos from inside web pages, then save, blog, email and print what you clip. Clipmarks is also home to a community of clippers who share their clips, leave comments and pop their favorite clips to the top for everyone to see. To create clips you have to just sign up and install the free browser add-on for Firefox, Internet Explorer or Flock. As you surf the Web, use the Clipmarks toolbar to clip and save sections of a page: text, graphics, and even YouTube videos.
Clipmarks.com In Their Own Words
“We created Clipmarks because we’re fascinated by the moments that snap people out of a day dream. Let’s face it, when we read articles in newspapers, magazines, or on the web, we often drift in and out of space. But then there are those moments that smack us in the face and make us take notice. Offline, they’re the moments when you reach for a highlighter or pair of scissors. But online, what do we do when something within a web page jumps out at us? Bookmarking the whole page is not an adequate solution because it doesn’t let us shine the spotlight on the parts that matter the most to us. And copy/paste, forget about it.”
Why Clipmarks.com It Might Be A Killer
Clipmarks is an easy-to-use online tool for clipping, saving, and sharing just those pieces of Web pages that matter most to you. It is absolutely necessary if you do what most of us do every day, which is to collect information on the Internet.
Some Questions About Clipmarks.com
Will they change the way people use the web, as pretended? Will people switch to clipping or, will they just stick to copying and pasting or to adding bookmarks? 







