I’ve been thinking about a problem I run into constantly:
We save so much information, but most of it disappears.
Articles, YouTube videos, PDFs, screenshots, notes, saved posts, quotes, research, random ideas, all of it feels useful in the moment, so we save it somewhere. But after a while, it gets scattered across different apps.Bookmarks become a graveyard. Notes get messy.Screenshots get buried. Saved posts stay locked inside platforms. PDFs sit in folders with no context. Videos become hard to revisit meaningfully. The frustrating part is that the information still exists. It just stops being useful.
So we’re building Recallr, an app that turns saved content into a private AI memory layer. You can save links, videos, PDFs, notes, and ideas, then search across them, ask questions, and see a visual knowledge map of how your saved ideas connect. The goal is not just another notes app or bookmark manager. It’s closer to a second brain for the things you consume and care about, something that helps you actually use what you save instead of letting it become digital clutter.
For people who try new apps often: what would make something like this worth keeping?