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🧩 Free Chrome extension — add the Sticky Note Web Clipper

Save Any Page in One Click.
The Free Sticky Note Web Clipper.
Here's Why It Sticks.

By TaskLoco  ·  taskloco.com  ·  June 2026
Quick Answer

The fastest way to save a web page with its link is to use a browser extension that auto-captures the URL and title the moment you click — no copying, no pasting, no forgetting. The free Sticky Note Web Clipper does exactly that: one click saves the page as a visual sticky note with the link already inside, ready to find on any device.

Add to Chrome — Free
One click. Auto title. Auto URL. Free.

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The Sticky Note Web Clipper popup open over a Wikipedia article — title and URL auto-filled
One click saves the page you're reading as a sticky note.

You found something worth keeping — an article, a recipe, a deep-dive research page, a YouTube video you actually want to watch later. So you either left the tab open (and lost it in a crash), bookmarked it (and buried it in a folder you'll never open), or copy-pasted the URL somewhere (and forgot which doc). None of those is saving. They're just delaying the loss.

Saving a web page so you can actually find it again requires two things: the link has to go somewhere you'll look, and it needs enough context to mean something when you do. A raw URL in a list of fifty raw URLs means nothing. A visual note with the page title, the URL, and your own tags attached? That you can find in thirty seconds, even months later.

Why Most Ways of Saving Links Fail You Later

Browser bookmarks are the default answer, and they fail in a predictable way: they scale terribly. The first twenty bookmarks feel organized. By bookmark one hundred, you have nested folders with names like "Misc" and "Read Later 2" that you never touch. There's no visual thumbnail, no note about why you saved it, and the title the browser grabs is often the site's generic page title rather than anything descriptive.

Open tabs are worse. They feel like saving — the page is right there — but a browser restart, a crash, or just too many windows open wipes them out. Even browser session-restore features aren't reliable enough to treat as a real archive.

Copy-pasting URLs into a notes app or doc solves the crash problem but creates a new one: a flat list of links with zero context. You look at https://www.example.com/article/23847 three weeks later and have no idea what it was or why you saved it.

The problem isn't saving the URL — it's saving enough context that the link is still useful when you come back to it.

What actually works is capturing the page title and the URL together, in a format that's visually scannable, searchable, and available wherever you are when you finally want to revisit it.

The clipper showing a saved confirmation after capturing a page
Title and URL auto-filled — saved in a click.

The Right Way to Save a Web Page with Its Link

Here's the method that holds up, whether you use any particular tool or not:

That's the complete method. The question is just which tool makes all five of those things happen with the least friction.

If you have to do more than two actions to save a page, most people stop doing it consistently. One click is the threshold for a habit that actually sticks.
The Sticky Note Web Clipper saving a YouTube video as a note
Save a YouTube video — it embeds and plays inside your note.

How the Sticky Note Web Clipper Handles All of This in One Click

The Sticky Note Web Clipper is a free Chrome extension that collapses the entire save-a-page workflow into a single toolbar click. The moment you click the icon, the current page's title and URL are auto-filled into a new sticky note. You can add a quick thought or tag before you close it, or just leave it and move on — the core save is already done.

The result isn't a list of URLs. It's a visual wall of notes, each showing the page title and your annotation if you added one, with the link preserved and clickable inside the note. You can scan that wall the way you'd scan sticky notes on a real board — by shape, color, and text — rather than reading through a flat list line by line.

YouTube videos get their own treatment: when you clip a YouTube page, the video embeds directly inside the note and plays there. You don't have to click out to YouTube to remember what the video was about.

Tags and search work across everything you've saved — so finding a page you clipped weeks ago takes seconds, not a scroll through hundreds of bookmarks.

Everything syncs automatically to TaskLoco, which means the notes you save from Chrome on your laptop are waiting for you in the free TaskLoco app on your iPhone or Android phone. Sign in is free with Google — no separate account to create.

A wall of clipped pages saved as visual sticky notes
Everything you clip, on one visual wall.

Building a Saving Habit That Actually Works

The reason most people end up with sixty open tabs and a bookmark folder they're ashamed of is that saving felt like extra work at the time. When the friction is low enough, the habit forms naturally. Here's how to build it:

With the Sticky Note Web Clipper installed, the capture step is already as fast as it gets. The rest is just building the habit around the tool, and the visual wall format makes it genuinely easy to scan and act on what you've saved.

Sticky Note Web Clipper — save any webpage as a sticky note in one click, free
Save any webpage as a sticky note. One click. Free.
Learn More 🔍

Save the web in one click

The Sticky Note Web Clipper turns any page, article, or YouTube video into a visual sticky note — title and URL auto-filled. Everything you clip lands on your TaskLoco wall and syncs to every device, free.

🔗 Links 📰 Articles 📹 YouTube videos 📑 Research pages 🏷️ Tags & search
Add to Chrome — Free

Free Chrome extension · sign in free with Google · syncs to iPhone, Android & web

Ready to start clipping?

Add the free extension. Sign in with Google. Clip your first page in seconds.

The Sticky Note Web Clipper is free. Install it from the Chrome Web Store, sign in with Google, and every page you clip becomes a sticky note you can find later.

Your clipped notes sync to TaskLoco across Chrome, desktop, iPhone, and Android — also free to start. No credit card to begin.

Get the Free Clipper

Sticky Note Web Clipper

  • Free Chrome extension
  • One-click save — any page, article, or video
  • Title & URL auto-filled
  • Tags & search
  • Free forever

Synced to TaskLoco

  • Sign in free with Google
  • Your wall on Chrome, desktop, iPhone, Android
  • YouTube videos embed & play in notes
  • Visual sticky-note wall
  • Free to start

Add It to Chrome — Free

Sticky Note Web Clipper · by TaskLoco

One click saves any page, article, or YouTube video as a sticky note. Title and URL auto-filled.

Add to Chrome — Free
Then sign in free with Google — your notes sync to iPhone, Android, and Web

See TaskLoco in Action

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the easiest way to save a web page with its link?

The easiest method is a one-click browser extension that auto-captures the page title and URL together. The free Sticky Note Web Clipper does this from your Chrome toolbar — one click and the page is saved as a visual sticky note with the link already inside.

Why are bookmarks so hard to find later?

Browser bookmarks store a URL and a title in a flat or nested list with no visual layout, no search-friendly tags, and no way to add context about why you saved something. After a few dozen bookmarks, finding any specific one requires knowing exactly where you filed it — which you almost never do. A visual, searchable format like sticky notes with tags is much easier to scan and retrieve from.

Can I save YouTube videos with their links and watch them later?

Yes. When you clip a YouTube page with the Sticky Note Web Clipper, the video embeds directly inside the note and plays there. The URL is saved automatically, so you can also click through to YouTube from the note whenever you want.

Will my saved links be available on my phone as well as my computer?

Yes. Notes you clip in Chrome sync to TaskLoco, which has free apps for iPhone and Android as well as a desktop web experience. Sign in with the same Google account and everything is waiting for you.

Is the Sticky Note Web Clipper free?

Yes — the extension is completely free. TaskLoco, where your notes sync, also has a free tier. Install the extension from the Chrome Web Store, sign in with Google, and start clipping immediately.

How is this different from just copying and pasting a URL into a notes app?

Copy-pasting a URL gives you a raw link with no title and no context. The Sticky Note Web Clipper auto-fills the page title and URL together in one click, and the visual sticky note format makes saved items scannable rather than just a long list of links. You can also add tags and search across everything you've saved.

How do I install the Sticky Note Web Clipper?

Search for 'Sticky Note Web Clipper' in the Chrome Web Store, click 'Add to Chrome', then sign in with Google. The toolbar icon will appear in Chrome immediately, and clicking it on any page saves it as a sticky note with the title and URL auto-filled.

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