Some feedback from an Evenote Premium customer who uses their Web Clipper 50 times a day:
1. Love the autoplaying videos – it's very easy to understand how the service works at a quick glance, and the UI looks slick.
2. You could tell us if it's free, paid, or freemium. I'm less likely to try a web app that doesn't explain up front what it costs to use it.
3. If it's free, it might be worth reassuring people how you expect to keep it running. (e.g. "Use it free or go PRO and get x, y, and z.") I feel nervous about collecting thousands of links and images in a free web app I've never heard of that has no clear business model in place.
4. In the first video, dragging-and-dropping a link to bookmark a page looks like a sluggish process that I wouldn't want to repeat many times a day, possibly because the location bar and your interface are at opposite sides of the browser. Perhaps mention if there are shortcut keys to dump bookmarks and file them later? Evernote's Web Clipper has a bunch of keyboard shortcuts (http://d.pr/i/FlIl ) – it feels like using vim once you learn them, and I wouldn't want to go back to a drag-and-drop only experience.
We are working on integrating Dragdis with Evernote, so that on the sidebar you would see your notebooks and could drag to them.
The main value is not just to save stuff, but to save it in an organized way, that means in a particular notebook. You wouldn't be able to do that with keyboard shortcuts.
1. Love the autoplaying videos – it's very easy to understand how the service works at a quick glance, and the UI looks slick.
2. You could tell us if it's free, paid, or freemium. I'm less likely to try a web app that doesn't explain up front what it costs to use it.
3. If it's free, it might be worth reassuring people how you expect to keep it running. (e.g. "Use it free or go PRO and get x, y, and z.") I feel nervous about collecting thousands of links and images in a free web app I've never heard of that has no clear business model in place.
4. In the first video, dragging-and-dropping a link to bookmark a page looks like a sluggish process that I wouldn't want to repeat many times a day, possibly because the location bar and your interface are at opposite sides of the browser. Perhaps mention if there are shortcut keys to dump bookmarks and file them later? Evernote's Web Clipper has a bunch of keyboard shortcuts (http://d.pr/i/FlIl ) – it feels like using vim once you learn them, and I wouldn't want to go back to a drag-and-drop only experience.