Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Flamory positions itself as a “second memory.” Its core goal is to save the webpages, files, PDFs, emails, and other documents users see on their screen, making it easier to search for them later and return to the original location. It is closer to a personal knowledge management, offline bookmarking, and research snapshot tool than a traditional enterprise SaaS product.
The key feature is Snapshot: users can save screenshots, selected text, and the location within a page, then double-click a snapshot later to open the original document or webpage at the exact position. For search, Flamory supports keyword-based searching across saved webpages. It can also automatically search local snapshots when users search on Google, displaying matching results in a notification bar. The Topics feature groups related snapshots under the same research topic. Integrations cover common desktop applications such as Adobe Reader/Acrobat, Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, Excel, OneNote, Outlook, VLC, Windows Explorer, and Notepad++.
The official website only clearly states that personal use is free. It does not disclose pricing for team editions, enterprise plans, commercial licenses, or payment methods. In terms of deployment, the website emphasizes that browsing history is stored only on the user’s computer and that privacy is protected, so it appears to be primarily a local desktop software model. No clear details were found regarding cloud sync, self-hosting, mobile apps, or browser extensions.
The privacy policy says Flamory takes appropriate security measures for data collection, storage, and processing, and that it does not sell, trade, or rent personally identifiable information. Its “data stays on your own machine” design is an advantage for privacy-conscious users. However, information commonly expected from enterprise software—such as team collaboration, role-based permissions, audit logs, SSO, compliance certifications, APIs, and developer documentation—is not mentioned in the main content.
Its strengths include a clear workflow, free personal use, snapshot support across multiple applications, full-text search, and the ability to return to the original location. It is suitable for researchers, students, content creators, and individual users who need to organize large amounts of webpages, PDFs, and Office materials. Its weaknesses are limited enterprise capabilities, limited pricing and support information, and a lack of clearly defined cross-device or team use cases.
The main content does not provide information about access from China, payment, or localization, so its availability in China is unknown. If you need a more mature collaborative knowledge base, consider Notion, 语雀, or 飞书知识库. For personal notes and knowledge libraries, compare it with OneNote, Evernote, Obsidian, Raindrop.io, or Pocket.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on flamory.com official site.
flamory.com is an Unknown Site Builders provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach flamory.com directly.