If you're looking for something other than Unsummary, Briefy is another good option. It uses AI to retrieve information and present it in a structured summary format, including paragraphs, mindmaps and tables. Briefy lets you interact with the summarized information by asking follow-up questions and getting contextually aware answers. It works on multiple platforms and has a mobile-friendly reading interface, so it's good for boosting productivity and reader engagement with web content.
Another good option is Linfo, which pulls key points out of long documents like articles and YouTube videos. It presents information in a structured format with headings, subheadings and bullet points. Linfo also can turn website content into downloadable mind maps and include links to source documents. That makes it a good option for professionals who need to quickly and accurately digest a lot of information.
If you're dealing with academic papers, Scholarcy is a good option for an AI-powered summarization tool. It can turn wordy documents into interactive summary flashcards, handle lots of file formats, and include options for customizing summaries, taking notes and creating bibliographies. Scholarcy is geared for students and researchers who need to get a handle on complicated information so they can spend more time thinking at a higher level.
Last, there's Summarize This, which can summarize text, PDFs, websites and YouTube videos. It's got options for text summarization, web page summarization and fast summarization. With versions for iOS and Chrome, and system-wide summarization through shortcuts and extensions, it's good for researchers, students and creative types who want to free up time and effort in their work.