← Blog
SUMMARIZE · 2 MIN

How to summarize a web page or long link

June 12, 2026 · 2 min read

How to summarize a web page automatically so a saved link carries its meaning, not just a URL you forget.

A saved link is a promise you rarely keep. It is a blue string of text that means something today and nothing next week, because a URL does not tell you what is on the other side of it.

So your saved links become a graveyard. You cannot tell the essential one from the one you clicked on a whim, and you are not going to open forty pages to find out.

The fix is to summarize a web page at the moment you save the link, so the save carries the meaning of the page and not just its address. The link still works. But now it also tells you why you kept it.

Why a bare link forgets itself

A URL is a pointer, not a memory. It points at a page that might be long, might have changed, and definitely does not fit in your head.

When all you keep is the pointer, every saved link is a small mystery. You have to reopen the page to remember what it was, which is the exact effort you were deferring when you saved it.

A summary closes that gap. A title and a few key points travel with the link, so a glance is enough to know what the page was about and whether it still matters to you.

How to summarize a web page automatically

You do not have to read the page and write notes. Save the link and let a summarizer fetch the page and condense it for you.

A useful save of a web page usually includes:

With that attached, your links stop being a graveyard and start being a library. The same approach applies to any long read, as in how to summarize an article.

A saved link you can actually find

The last piece is search. Once a page is summarized and tagged, you can describe what you half-remember instead of scrolling a list of identical-looking URLs.

That turns "I know I saved something about this" into an answer instead of a hunt. If saving links is your main use, how to save links to read later covers the habit end to end.

Where Reminari fits

Reminari saves a link in one tap, and optional cloud AI writes a title, a summary, key points, and tags so the page carries its meaning, not just its URL. You can ask your vault a question and get an answer with its sources, or keep the AI off and search by keyword. Mark any save on-device only and it stays on your phone.

Join the waitlist — Android first, iOS soon.

Save it now. Find it later.

Reminari is launching on Android. Be first in.

Join the waitlist →