I tried to use it, and it just does not work very well, I don't it's because implementation is bad, it's just RAG (retrieval based generation) does not work well outside of some simple use cases.
nowadays I expect browsers to incorporate small LLMs like Mistral out of the box
also: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=297648
While you're at it, I'd recommend to consider uploading the new bookmarks to a dedicated bookmark manager and avoid having the browser manage your bookmarks. For folks who rely on bookmarks, dedicated bookmark managers offer great value (eg. auto-archiving a copy of every bookmark to combat link rot). I currently use Raindrop, but if I were to start fresh I'd go with Linkwarden instead.
I think we're gonna be close to that, there's already models running in the browser (with https://webllm.mlc.ai/) the next step is to make it more efficient.
I haven't tried it yet but looking at screenshots, it will be nice if it supports importing and exporting bookmarks as plaintext. Even better a custom store for bookmarks.
This looks so useful to me but at the same time I could never use this, or the hundred other insanely useful things like this that all rely on OpenAI or some other equally dubious party. (Dubious meaning the party being someone other than me.)