Skip to main content

About

I built this because
my Notion was a mess.

Adrianna Tan

Adrianna Tan

Founder, Link In Comments

For two years, I copied every interesting link I found into a Notion database. LinkedIn posts, Substack articles, things people sent me before meetings. It was the most important part of how I kept up with my industry, and it was held together with copy-paste and good intentions.

The database grew to hundreds of rows. I couldn’t find anything. I’d save a link in January and need it in March, and by then it was buried under months of unread rows with titles like “Ethics + Sustainability = Responsible AI” and no context for why I’d saved it.

So I built Link In Comments. It reads every link you save, summarises it, tags it by topic, and has it ready when you need it. The thing I was doing badly by hand, done well by default.

The Notion database that started it all

A Notion table of saved links, rows of truncated article titles and URLs stretching down the page
A peek into my brain.

What I believe

The link you saved in January is the one you need in March.

Reading compounds. The people I admire most read widely and pull from things they encountered months ago. The tool should make that effortless, not require a second job of tagging and organising.

Your reading list is nobody else’s business. Your library is private.

I don’t sell it or share it. What you read is a window into how you think, and that deserves to stay yours.

Currently in beta

Link In Comments is free while I’m in beta. I’m building this in public and I read every piece of feedback personally. If something’s broken or you have an idea, I genuinely want to hear it.

Say hello →