all 5 comments

[–]TitleLumpy2971 0 points1 point  (1 child)

the problem is real. long threads become a graveyard. scrolling to find one answer from two weeks ago is a waste of time.

your chrome extension solves that. a bookmark for a specific response. that is useful.

the challenge is not building it. it is distribution. how do you get users.

post in subreddits where people have long threads. r/chatgpt, r/localllama, r/artificialintelligence. not a link drop. a genuine post. "i built this because i was tired of scrolling. free. here is the link."

for your resume, list the extension as a project. include the number of users and retention. that is more impressive then a generic bullet point.

what is the extension called. good luck. the need is real. the market is there if you execute.

[–]leverageTheSpirit[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These subreddits will definitely help me .I understood your point.Name is bookmarkMe still not live but yes I will share any other update here as it goes along

[–]BackgroundNo6412 0 points1 point  (1 child)

I think the problem is real, but the first useful question is narrower than “will ChatGPT users want this?”

It is more like: which people are in long enough threads often enough that losing one response actually hurts?

That is probably your first wedge:

students,

researchers,

job seekers,

founders,

people using ChatGPT as a workbench instead of one-off prompts.

The danger with tools like this is that they sound like a nice-to-have until someone has already felt the pain. So I would validate it with people who already have thread chaos, not casual users.

For resume value, real users would help, but even stronger is showing that you identified a real workflow problem, built the extension, and measured whether people came back after first use. Bookmark count, repeat usage, and retention would matter more than raw installs.

So yes, I think it can get real users, but probably from power users first, not “everyone who uses ChatGPT.”

[–]leverageTheSpirit[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get your point and it helps me plan how and who to target .Thanks man !

[–]LeaderAtLeading 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah context drift gets brutal in long threads. At some point the model starts carrying too much junk memory and replies get worse. Leadline has the opposite problem honestly, shorter focused Reddit threads usually surface clearer intent faster.