
SynapseAI
Capture and share articles, videos, tweets, and notes in one second-brain workspace.
Tagline
Your second brain for saved content
Save tweets, videos, and articles in one place
A library for founders who collect before they create
Stop losing bookmarks, screenshots, and source links
A second brain for mixed-media knowledge capture.
The strongest category clue on the page is "Your Second Brain" plus support for tweets, videos, articles, and notes, so this can be framed as a personal knowledge system rather than a generic notes app.
The alternative to scattered bookmarks, screenshots, and doc links.
Users who save content across multiple formats are currently stitching together browser bookmarks, Notion, Readwise, and docs. SynapseAI can position itself as the single capture layer for all of that.
A lightweight content library for people who collect before they create.
The page emphasizes capture and share, not task management or writing. That makes it a pain-killer for creators and researchers whose biggest problem is organizing sources before turning them into output.
Primary user
Knowledge workers who regularly save web content for later reference, especially founders, builders, and creators managing lots of reading and research
ICP #1
Solo founder juggling market research, product ideas, and competitor links
Pain
They save tweets, articles, and videos across tabs, bookmarks, Notion pages, and messages, then can't find the thing they swore they'd remember later.
Why this solves
SynapseAI puts mixed media into one workspace, which is exactly the kind of consolidation this persona needs if they want a single place to capture and revisit research.
ICP #2
Content strategist at a startup who curates references for posts, newsletters, and briefs
Pain
They constantly collect source material from X/Twitter, YouTube, and articles, then waste time digging through scattered bookmarks before deadlines.
Why this solves
A workspace built specifically to capture tweets, videos, articles, and notes maps to their source-gathering workflow better than generic bookmarks or docs.
ICP #3
Product manager doing ongoing competitor and customer research
Pain
Their research lives in too many places - slack messages, browser bookmarks, docs, and screenshots - making synthesis and sharing painfully slow.
Why this solves
SynapseAI’s central save-and-share model gives them a more organized home for research artifacts, though the page doesn't prove any advanced tagging, search, or team features yet.
Strengths
- +The "Your Second Brain" concept is instantly understandable and gives the product a familiar mental model.
- +The page clearly communicates supported content types: tweets, videos, articles, and notes.
- +The sign-in / sign-up flow is simple and frictionless, which fits an early-stage product.
Weaknesses
- −There is almost no proof of the actual product experience beyond the login screen, so the page feels empty and unconvincing.
- −The messaging is generic; "Capture, organise, and share" could describe dozens of tools, including Notion, Pocket, and Raindrop.io.
- −There are no screenshots, product demos, or use-case examples to show how SynapseAI is different.
- −The page does not explain how content is organized, searched, tagged, retrieved, or shared, which are the real buying questions.
- −The copy uses broad lifestyle language instead of specific job-to-be-done language, so it misses a clear target audience.
Fix these
- Add a hero section with the actual UI and a specific promise, such as saving a tweet, YouTube video, and article into one searchable workspace.
- Rewrite the headline to target a sharper persona, like researchers, creators, or founders, instead of everyone who uses notes.
- Show 3 concrete workflows: save from X, organize by topic, share a curated collection.
- Add a comparison block against Notion, Pocket, and Raindrop.io to clarify why SynapseAI exists.
- Include social proof or product evidence - saved item cards, search results, tags, collections, or a short demo video - to make the product feel real.
Drop-in replacement copy
Headline
Save everything. Find it later.
Tweets, videos, articles, and notes in one workspace.
Capture mixed media without friction
Save tweets, videos, articles, and notes in one place instead of scattering them across tabs and bookmarks. The faster it is to capture, the more likely you’ll actually use it later.
Keep your research in one workspace
Organize source material without jumping between Notion, Pocket, and random docs. SynapseAI is built to hold the messy pile of things you collect before you create.
Find the thing you saved weeks ago
A saved item is only useful if you can get back to it quickly. SynapseAI gives your saved content a single home so you don’t have to rebuild context from scratch.
Share curated collections easily
Turn saved links, clips, and notes into something you can share with a teammate, client, or audience. It’s a lightweight way to publish the research you already collected.
FAQ
What is SynapseAI for?
It’s a workspace for saving tweets, videos, articles, and notes in one place. It’s built for people who collect a lot of source material and want to find it again later.
How is this different from Notion or Pocket?
Notion is flexible, but not built for fast mixed-media capture. Pocket and similar tools are mostly read-later tools; SynapseAI is meant to be a single home for the content you save across formats.
Who is this best for?
Founders, creators, PMs, designers, and anyone who saves a lot of web content for research, inspiration, or future writing. If you live in tabs and bookmarks, this is for you.
Can I share what I save?
Yes, you can share content from your workspace. The goal is to make it easy to turn saved research into something useful for other people.
Is this a notes app?
Not really. Notes are part of it, but the main job is saving and organizing mixed content from the web so your references don’t get lost.
Bookmarks are where ideas go to die. I built SynapseAI so I could save tweets, videos, articles, and notes in one place I’d actually revisit. If your research lives across tabs, bookmarks, and Notion chaos, this is for you.
I kept losing the same tweet twice. So I built SynapseAI: a second brain for mixed media. Save a tweet, article, video, or note in one workspace. Find it later. Share it when it matters.
Most note apps fail at capture. They’re fine once you already know what to write. The real pain is before that: you see a tweet, video, or article worth keeping and need to save it fast. That’s the gap SynapseAI is built for.
I stopped building for notes. I started building for the messy pile of stuff people save before they create: - tweets - videos - articles - raw notes SynapseAI is the workspace I wanted for that pile.
Your research is already scattered. Tweet in one tab. Video in another. Article in bookmarks. Notes in a doc you forgot existed. SynapseAI puts all of it in one place so you can actually use what you saved.
You do not need another bookmark graveyard. You need one place for the links, clips, and notes you keep promising yourself you’ll use later. That’s the whole idea behind SynapseAI.
Save a tweet in seconds. Then add an article, a video, and a note next to it. SynapseAI keeps your sources in one workspace so your ideas don’t disappear between tabs.
One workspace for all your sources. Tweet from X. YouTube video. Article. Personal note. If you collect research before you write, this is the cleanest way I found to keep it all together.
People kept asking for this. Founders wanted a place for competitor links. Creators wanted a clean way to store references. PMs wanted less chaos. So SynapseAI became the simplest version of a second brain for mixed media.
The first users wanted less friction. Not a giant system. Not a 50-step workflow. Just a fast way to save content and find it again later. That’s what SynapseAI focuses on.
Angle: Founder pain and personal origin story
I kept losing the same useful things over and over. A tweet with a sharp idea. A YouTube video with a useful framework. An article I wanted to reference later. A note I wrote to myself and forgot about. They were spread across bookmarks, tabs, Notion pages, screenshots, and DMs. The problem was never “I need more content.” The problem was: I had no single place to capture the things worth remembering. So I built SynapseAI. It’s a simple workspace for saving tweets, videos, articles, and notes in one place so you can revisit them when you actually need them. Not as a giant productivity system. Not as another place to manage tasks. Just a cleaner home for research, inspiration, and source material. If you’re a founder, creator, PM, or anyone who collects before they create, I’d love to hear what your current mess looks like. What do you use today for saved content?
Angle: Use case for creators and researchers
The best ideas usually start as saved fragments. A tweet. A video. An article. A note. The issue is that most people save those fragments in different places, then waste time reconnecting them later. That’s why I built SynapseAI. It’s a second brain for mixed media - designed for people who collect source material before they turn it into work. A content strategist can keep references for newsletters and briefs in one workspace. A founder can store competitor notes, market research, and product ideas without losing them in tabs. A PM can centralize customer insights and competitor links without rebuilding the same context twice. The goal is not to make saving feel impressive. The goal is to make retrieval easy. Because a saved item is only useful if you can find it again in under 10 seconds. I’m curious: what do you save most often, and where does it currently live?
Angle: Positioning against scattered tools
Most people don’t have a knowledge problem. They have a storage problem. Their saved stuff is split across: - browser bookmarks - Notion pages - Readwise or Pocket - screenshots - random Slack messages - docs they never reopen That fragmentation is expensive. Not in money - in context. Every time you have to hunt for a link, you lose momentum. Every time you can’t find a source, you rewrite work you already did. Every time your notes and references are scattered, your ideas stay half-finished. SynapseAI is my attempt to fix that. A single workspace for tweets, videos, articles, and notes. A place to save fast. A place to find it later. A place to share curated collections without digging through a dozen tools. I’m still early, so I’m especially interested in hearing from people who live in research mode all day. What would make a saved-content workspace actually replace your current setup?
Tagline
Save tweets, videos, and articles in one brain
Description
SynapseAI is a simple workspace for capturing tweets, videos, articles, and notes in one place. Built for founders, creators, and researchers who are tired of scattered bookmarks and lost context.
Maker's first comment
I built SynapseAI because I was tired of losing good stuff. A tweet would spark an idea. A video would explain the next step. An article would have one line I needed later. But all of it lived in different places, and every time I went looking for it, I’d waste time rebuilding context I already had. So I wanted something simpler: one workspace for the things I save before I create. Tweets, videos, articles, notes - all in one place, easy to revisit, easy to share. This is still early, and I’m not pretending it solves everything. Right now I care most about whether it actually feels better than using a messy mix of bookmarks, docs, and random tools. If you collect a lot of source material, I’d love to know what’s still missing for you. Do you care more about capture speed, search, organization, or sharing?
Pinned maker comment
I’d love feedback on whether the core workflow feels faster than bookmarks + Notion + Pocket, and what would make you trust it as your default saved-content workspace.
Meta
Targeting founders drowning in saved links.
Hypothesis: solo founders will switch if we give them one place for tweets, articles, videos, and notes instead of bookmarks and Notion chaos. SynapseAI is a second brain for research you actually want to find later.
Google Search
Second brain for tweets, videos, articles
Hypothesis: people searching for Pocket, Raindrop, or Readwise alternatives want mixed-media capture, not another read-later list. SynapseAI saves tweets, videos, articles, and notes in one workspace.
Reddit Promoted
Still losing useful tweets and links?
Hypothesis: indie hackers and product people are frustrated enough with scattered bookmarks to try a faster capture workspace. SynapseAI keeps tweets, videos, articles, and notes in one place so you can stop rebuilding context.
Subreddits
r/SideProject
Show the problem and the tiny workflow: saving a tweet, article, and video into one workspace
Rules: Must be transparent that you built it; focus on the problem and demo; avoid hard selling in the title
r/indiehackers
Build-in-public post about why bookmarks and Notion failed for mixed-media research
Rules: Share learnings, metrics, or a story; no drive-by promotion; engage in comments
r/microsaas
Post the niche workflow and ask for feedback on the positioning for founders and creators
Rules: Keep it relevant to micro-SaaS builders; show product, not just marketing; avoid spammy launch language
r/EntrepreneurRideAlong
Share the founder story of building a research workspace for founder chaos
Rules: Must be authentic, progress-focused, and useful; community prefers process and lessons over blatant ads
r/productivity
Ask how people manage saved articles, videos, and notes without losing context
Rules: Lead with a genuine productivity problem and ask for advice; product mentions should be light and contextual
Communities
Post a build log, reply to every comment, and ask for workflow feedback instead of pitching the product.
Share the technical/product angle only if the story is sharp: why mixed-media capture is still broken. No marketing language.
Engage before launch by commenting on maker posts and asking for feedback on onboarding and positioning.
Build in Public Discords
Join a small founder Discord, share screenshots and lessons, and ask for brutal feedback on the homepage and capture flow.
Cold outreach template
Hey {firstName} - saw {context}. I built SynapseAI because I kept losing tweets, articles, and videos I wanted to reuse later. If you’re still juggling bookmarks, Notion, and random tabs, I’d love to give you access and hear what feels clunky. No pressure - just want feedback from people who actually live in research mode.
Product Hunt timing
Launch on Tuesday at 12:01 AM Pacific Time. That gives you the full weekday to collect early traction while hitting founders, creators, and PMs as they start their workday across US and EU time zones.
Indie Hackers post ideas
- 01I built a second brain for tweets, videos, and articles because bookmarks kept failing me
- 02What I learned trying to replace Notion + Pocket for research capture
- 03My first 30 users: who actually wants a mixed-media knowledge workspace?
Competitor alternatives
Current tone of voice
Minimal, friendly, and vaguely personal/productivity-oriented, with copy like "Welcome Back!", "Stay connected - sign in with your personal info", and "Sign In to Your Brain."
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