If you need a tool to help you organize and connect your own learning from across the internet, Melon is a good option. The tool is designed to help people think and learn by connecting ideas across articles, social posts, videos and other sources. With its AI-powered discussion, trend analysis and semantic search, you can save information from different apps and browsers and then easily find it with a Chrome extension. That can help you work more efficiently and write newsletters and summarize ideas more quickly.
Another tool worth a look is Heuristica, an AI-infused concept mapping tool. It uses a mind map interface to help you learn, research and think creatively. Heuristica can draw information from sources like Wikipedia, YouTube and news articles, and you can use custom prompts, flashcards and content creation. It's geared for researchers and students looking for a flexible, personalized way to explore subjects.
For a more general-purpose learning assistant, check out Mindgrasp. The AI-powered tool generates notes, summaries, flashcards and quizzes based on documents, YouTube videos and podcasts. It can perform automated summarization, AI search and provide instant answers. That makes it good for students, professionals and teachers who need to quickly digest and remember a lot of information.
Last, Recall is a personal knowledge base tool that summarizes and stores information from the web, including YouTube videos and PDFs, into a dynamic knowledge graph. It uses AI to automatically categorize and link new information to what you already know, and it includes spaced repetition for better retention. Recall is available as browser extensions and mobile apps, and it's good for professionals and lifelong learners who want to get the most out of their learning and retention.