Wiggle for Google Chrome
A Chrome extension that keeps your prompts where you actually use them: inside ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and Perplexity.
The question I was chasing
Where should your prompts live, and why is it always a separate doc you forget to open?
Everyone serious about AI ends up with a junk drawer of prompts in Notes or a Google Doc, miles from where they're used. I wanted prompt management to live inside the AI tools themselves, one click from where you paste, across whichever model you happen to be in.
Why it exists
People don't use one assistant any more. It's ChatGPT for this, Claude for that, Gemini and Perplexity for the rest. The prompts you refine are worth keeping, but they're stranded in whichever tab you wrote them in. A browser extension is the only thing that can sit across all of them at once.
The constraints
A Chrome extension that behaves consistently across four different AI web apps, each with its own layout and its own habits, and that passes Chrome Web Store review, which means tight permissions and nothing dubious done to page content. Saving and pasting had to be genuinely one click, because a prompt manager that's slower than just retyping is dead on arrival.
The decisions that mattered
Meet people inside the tools rather than at another destination: save a prompt where you wrote it, paste it where you need it, no context switch.
Tags over folders for organising, because prompt libraries grow sideways, not into neat hierarchies.
Add a full-page notebook for when you do want to sit and curate a library properly. Quick capture and considered organisation are different moods, and the extension supports both.
What it is
A Chrome extension for managing AI prompts and context across ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and Perplexity. Save prompts in one click, organise them with tags, paste anywhere, plus a full-page notebook for managing larger prompt libraries. Shipped on the Chrome Web Store.
Built with: Cursor, Claude Code, Codex, Chrome APIs, React
Where it landed
Live on the Chrome Web Store: a small, sharp tool that does one job across the tools people actually switch between. If I pushed it further, the obvious direction is sync and sharing: prompt libraries that move between machines and between teammates, not just one browser.
Part of the Rolling Waves work archive.