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Mindspase

A visual AI knowledge base that organizes what you save

Productivity
Artificial Intelligence

Hunted byGil finkelsteinGil finkelstein

Mindspase is a visual, AI-powered knowledge base that automatically organizes everything you save, articles, images, videos, music, quotes, PDFs, with zero folders or manual tagging. Search the way you actually remember things: "that blue design article from last month." Features unique visual layout, natural language + visual search, Collective Minds for shared knowledge spaces, and full end-to-end encryption. No ads. No data selling. Ever.

Top comment

Hey Product Hunt! 👋 I built Mindspase because I kept losing the things that inspired me. Bookmarks became a graveyard. Notes apps became a mess. I wanted something that worked the way memory should work, just save it, and it's there when you need it. The core bet we made: zero manual organization, ever. The AI handles tagging, categorizing, and understanding your content from the moment you save it. You just live your life and accumulate knowledge. A few things I'm especially excited for you to try: - Natural language search, it's weirdly satisfying when it actually works - Collective Minds, shared knowledge spaces with people you trust - Visual mood browsing, filtering your saves by vibe, not category We're privacy-obsessed. No ads. No selling your data. Your mind is yours. Would love to hear what you think, and if you have a use case you'd want Mindspase to nail, drop it below. I read every comment. 🙏

Comment highlights

I commend you on getting this up and running. I just tried it myself to brain-dump some things about business across four different sections/spaces.

For something designed to take in information with the least amount of friction possible, I noticed a bit of friction when trying to jot down an idea. There are categories up top, a title, the body, selecting which space it belongs in, and a few other things in the idea area. It can feel a little busy when the goal is simply to capture a thought quickly.


I’m not trying to take anything away from the site/app — it looks awesome. My thought is that if the goal is a “second mind,” maybe the idea dump could be even more mindless and frictionless.


No tags is awesome, and if it truly remembers things well (as the claim suggests), do we really need sections at the moment of capture? My thought would be to make the brain dump as easy as possible, and then let users organize things later if they want to use the structure you’ve built.


Otherwise, the idea of being able to find things based on remembered context is a beautiful concept.


Thanks for building the website/app.

The concept of saving things without needing to manually organize them sounds very appealing. Natural language search and mood-based browsing also feel like a more intuitive way to rediscover content later. How does Mindspase decide which tags or categories to assign when saving very different types of content?

It's asking me to Sign in to base44.com - what's the connection? / Thanks

@gil_finkelstein2 If I build a mind, can I integrate it with other tools?

How does Mindspace's natural language search handle ambiguous or vague queries when users can't remember specific details about saved content?

Would it be able to tackle multiple languages? Here I specifically mean the search option