How to Save YouTube Videos with Timestamps for Study and Reference
How to Save YouTube Videos with Timestamps for Study and Reference
You watched a brilliant 45-minute lecture on machine learning last month. Somewhere around the 23-minute mark, the instructor explained gradient descent in a way that finally clicked. Now you need that explanation again, but all you remember is "the video with the good gradient descent part." Good luck finding that in your YouTube watch history.
This is the problem Markwise solves for learners who use video as a primary study tool.
Building a Video Knowledge Base
Instead of treating YouTube as a stream of content you watch once and forget, Markwise turns it into a searchable library you can reference whenever you need it.
Step 1: When you find a valuable educational video, save it to Markwise using the Chrome extension. Markwise pulls the video title, channel name, thumbnail, and description automatically.
Step 2: Create Spaces for your learning topics. "Machine Learning Course," "Web Development," "Physics Lectures," or whatever subjects you're studying. Drop each video into the right Space.
Step 3: Add notes when you save. This is where timestamps become powerful. Jot down the key moments: "12:30 - backpropagation intuition, 23:15 - gradient descent walkthrough, 38:00 - code implementation." These notes become searchable text.
Using Timestamps Effectively
The real value of saving videos with timestamps is that you never have to rewatch an entire video to find the one part you need.
Here's a practical timestamp workflow:
- Watch the video at normal speed the first time
- When you hit a section worth revisiting later, pause and note the timestamp
- Save the video to Markwise with your timestamp notes
- When you need to review, search Markwise, find the video, and jump directly to the right moment
Your notes might look something like this:
- "5:20 - Why SQL joins are slower than subqueries in this case"
- "14:45 - The diagram explaining event-driven architecture"
- "31:00 - Live coding the authentication middleware"
Each of these phrases becomes searchable. Six months later, searching "event-driven architecture diagram" will surface that exact video and your note pointing to 14:45.
Semantic Search Across Your Video Library
This is where things get genuinely useful. Markwise's semantic search understands what your saved content is about, not just the exact words in the title.
Say you saved a video titled "CS50 Lecture 4 - Memory" and wrote a note about pointer arithmetic. Later, you can search for "how C pointers work" and Markwise will find it, even though the word "pointer" never appeared in the video title.
This works across your entire library. If you've saved 200 educational videos over six months, you can search for a concept and Markwise will surface every relevant video, regardless of how the creator titled it.
Organizing by Course or Subject
For structured learning, like following an online course or studying for an exam, Spaces keep everything in order.
Example setup for a computer science student:
- Space: "Algorithms Course" - All lecture videos, supplementary YouTube explainers, and visualizations
- Space: "Interview Prep" - Coding interview walkthroughs, system design videos, and behavioral question guides
- Space: "Side Project Research" - Tutorial videos for the specific frameworks and tools you're using
When exam season hits, open the Algorithms Course Space and you have every resource in one place. No digging through YouTube playlists, browser history, or bookmarks folders.
Tips for Students and Self-Learners
- Save videos immediately. If you think "I might need this later," save it now. It takes two seconds and costs nothing.
- Write notes in your own words. Don't just copy the video title. Describe what you learned. This makes semantic search much more effective.
- Review your Spaces periodically. Scrolling through your saved videos is a form of spaced repetition. You'll notice connections between topics you missed the first time.
- Search before you Google. When you hit a concept you've seen before, check Markwise first. You might already have the perfect explanation saved from months ago.
Your YouTube watch history is a timeline. Markwise turns it into a knowledge base you can actually use.
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