Dump is your private second brain. Capture notes, photos, voice memos, documents, screenshots, and X bookmarks in one place. No folders, tags, or filing. Dump enriches information with web context and lets you find anything using on-device semantic search. Everything stays on your device and personal iCloud with zero cloud storage, zero tracking, and zero compromise. Just dump, remember, and instantly recall what matters.
A few years ago, I realized I was saving important things everywhere.
Ideas in Apple Notes. Links in X bookmarks. Documents in folders. Screenshots in Photos. Voice notes in different apps.
The problem wasn’t saving information. The problem was finding it later. I would remember having something, but not where I saved it.
Many founders, creators, and professionals told me they had the exact same problem. So I built Dump.
Dump is a private second brain that helps you remember everything.
Just save things into Dump and forget about organizing them. No folders. No tags. No complicated systems.
When you need something later, simply describe what you remember and Dump finds it for you.
Maybe it’s:
• A screenshot you saved three months ago • A business card from an event • A voice note from a morning walk • A PDF someone sent you • A tweet you bookmarked late at night
Dump understands meaning, not just filenames.
One of my favorite features is that Dump makes your memories smarter.
For example, if you save a business card, Dump can automatically find company information, LinkedIn profiles, and other useful context, turning a simple card into valuable knowledge.
We also added support for X (Twitter) bookmarks. Your saved posts, threads, and images can now live inside your second brain and become searchable alongside everything else.
And because forgetting isn’t the only problem, Dump can also create Apple Reminders from the memories you save and the context you provide, helping you remember important things at the right time.
Most importantly, Dump is built around privacy.
Many AI apps ask you to upload your notes, documents, and memories to their servers before they can help you find information.
We took a different approach.
When you save something in Dump, your notes, photos, voice memos, documents, screenshots, and bookmarks are stored on your device or in your personal iCloud account.
To make your memories searchable, Dump uses Zero Data Retention AI Models to extract context from your content. These models do not store your data and do not use it for training.
The extracted knowledge is then saved back to your device and synced through your own iCloud account.
When you search, you have two options:
• Quick Search uses on-device search to instantly find relevant memories. • Advanced Search uses Zero Data Retention AI to deeply understand your question and return richer, more accurate answers.
At no point do we store your memories on our servers.
• We can’t read them. • We can’t access them. • We can’t sell them.
Because we never have them.
Your data stays on your device and in your personal iCloud.
Dump is for anyone who has ever said:
“I know I saved that somewhere.”
If that sounds familiar, I’d love for you to try Dump and let me know what you think.
I’ll be here all day answering questions and would love to hear how you currently save and organize information in your life.
How does the semantic search actually perform with voice memos that aren't transcribed on a regular basis, or does Dump handle the transcription on-device too?
Been using Dump for a few days and the on-device semantic search is genuinely impressive, found a voice memo from last week by describing what it was about. Love that nothing leaves my phone.
How does the semantic search actually handle voice memos and photos, is it all transcribed and indexed locally too or just the text content?
How does the on-device semantic search actually perform once you've dumped a few thousand items, does it still feel instant or does it start to crawl?
The no-folders approach is such a relief after years of fighting with tags that never quite fit. On-device semantic search actually sounds like it delivers on the promise instead of just adding another layer of friction.
The dump it and forget it approach actually works, dumped a random mix of screenshots and voice notes and found them all later just by typing what I vaguely remembered. Love that nothing leaves my device.
How does the on-device semantic search actually perform when you have thousands of dumped items, and does it work offline once the initial setup is done?
Dumping everything without sorting feels weirdly freeing, and the semantic search actually pulls up that random recipe I screenshotted weeks ago. Love that it stays on device.
The semantic search actually works surprisingly well, found a voice memo from last week just by typing a vague idea. Love that nothing leaves my device, feels like the notes app I always wanted.
How does the on-device semantic search actually perform when you've dumped thousands of items?
the on-device semantic search without any cloud storage is a really thoughtful choice, especially for a tool meant to hold your most personal notes.
The no-folder approach actually works once you try the semantic search, found a random voice memo from last week just by typing what it was about. Love that nothing leaves my device.
how does the semantic search actually work on-device without sending data out, especially for the web enrichment part?
How does the on-device semantic search actually perform with thousands of mixed media files like voice memos and screenshots combined?
Captured a few notes and a bookmark already, and the semantic search actually pulled up what I was thinking of without me needing to tag anything. Love that it stays on my device too.
Curious how the semantic search holds up once you've dumped thousands of items, and whether the on-device model gets updated over time?
Hello. I like the idea of not worrying about folders or tags, but how well does the semantic search actually work when you’re trying to recall something you saved weeks ago?
this is perfect tool for someone like me who loves to hoard pics, videos until storage runs out. love this idea
The zero data retention framing is what separates this from the other AI second-brain apps, most of them bury the actual data policy three menus deep. Practical question though: if you're on the free 5GB iCloud tier and it fills up from screenshots and voice memos, does Dump just stop syncing new items, or does search quietly start missing things without telling you?
About Dump Memory on Product Hunt
“We fix your memory”
Dump Memory launched on Product Hunt on July 1st, 2026 and earned 115 upvotes and 32 comments, placing #21 on the daily leaderboard. Dump is your private second brain. Capture notes, photos, voice memos, documents, screenshots, and X bookmarks in one place. No folders, tags, or filing. Dump enriches information with web context and lets you find anything using on-device semantic search. Everything stays on your device and personal iCloud with zero cloud storage, zero tracking, and zero compromise. Just dump, remember, and instantly recall what matters.
Dump Memory was featured in Productivity (655.6k followers), Notes (8.3k followers) and Artificial Intelligence (473.1k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 253.8k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted Dump Memory?
Dump Memory was hunted by Kevin William David. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
Want to see how Dump Memory stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.
👋 Hello Product Hunt,
I’m Rohil, Designer of Dump Memory. Download from App Store and get 50 Free Credits (Happy Dumping...) : https://apps.apple.com/us/app/dump-memory/id6760990641
A few years ago, I realized I was saving important things everywhere.
Ideas in Apple Notes. Links in X bookmarks. Documents in folders. Screenshots in Photos. Voice notes in different apps.
The problem wasn’t saving information. The problem was finding it later.
I would remember having something, but not where I saved it.
Many founders, creators, and professionals told me they had the exact same problem. So I built Dump.
Dump is a private second brain that helps you remember everything.
Just save things into Dump and forget about organizing them. No folders. No tags. No complicated systems.
When you need something later, simply describe what you remember and Dump finds it for you.
Maybe it’s:
• A screenshot you saved three months ago
• A business card from an event
• A voice note from a morning walk
• A PDF someone sent you
• A tweet you bookmarked late at night
Dump understands meaning, not just filenames.
One of my favorite features is that Dump makes your memories smarter.
For example, if you save a business card, Dump can automatically find company information, LinkedIn profiles, and other useful context, turning a simple card into valuable knowledge.
We also added support for X (Twitter) bookmarks. Your saved posts, threads, and images can now live inside your second brain and become searchable alongside everything else.
And because forgetting isn’t the only problem, Dump can also create Apple Reminders from the memories you save and the context you provide, helping you remember important things at the right time.
Most importantly, Dump is built around privacy.
Many AI apps ask you to upload your notes, documents, and memories to their servers before they can help you find information.
We took a different approach.
When you save something in Dump, your notes, photos, voice memos, documents, screenshots, and bookmarks are stored on your device or in your personal iCloud account.
To make your memories searchable, Dump uses Zero Data Retention AI Models to extract context from your content. These models do not store your data and do not use it for training.
The extracted knowledge is then saved back to your device and synced through your own iCloud account.
When you search, you have two options:
• Quick Search uses on-device search to instantly find relevant memories.
• Advanced Search uses Zero Data Retention AI to deeply understand your question and return richer, more accurate answers.
At no point do we store your memories on our servers.
• We can’t read them.
• We can’t access them.
• We can’t sell them.
Because we never have them.
Your data stays on your device and in your personal iCloud.
Dump is for anyone who has ever said:
“I know I saved that somewhere.”
If that sounds familiar, I’d love for you to try Dump and let me know what you think.
I’ll be here all day answering questions and would love to hear how you currently save and organize information in your life.
Thank you for checking out Dump ❤️