– Color-coded highlighting (yellow, pink, green, blue) for organization.
– Automatic saving with proper citation (page title,link,highlight date).
– Dashboard with search bar and tagging for easy organization of highlights.
– PDF integration allows importing documents for annotation.
– Built-in note-taking called “Atomic Notes” lets users add context to highlights.
– Limited highlight colors and monthly quote-saving caps.
– Paid plan required for advanced export formats and integrations with external apps like Notion.
The concept behind Glasp aligns well with India’s growing emphasis on knowledge management in academia and business sectors. With its versatile solutions-highlighting texts directly on websites or PDFs-and support for social collaboration via public profiles, it caters perfectly to researchers, content creators, educators, or students managing extensive data workflows.
However, Indian users will need to weigh accessibility factors carefully-especially since regional research often mixes online sources with offline (e.g.,vernacular eBooks),where Glasp currently falls short unless converted into viewable formats. Additionally key for budget-conscious students would be its usability limits under free setups before needing premium tiers