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Joined 2 days ago
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Cake day: March 24th, 2026

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  • That’s a really good way to frame it.

    I kept coming back to the idea that the “act” shouldn’t be something new you have to learn — it should reuse what you’re already doing in each context.

    So instead of one single physical gesture, it’s more like a single intent expressed through different native actions:

    • on mobile → share
    • on desktop → paste
    • in browser → bookmarklet
    • sometimes even just typing something and sending it

    The key (for me) wasn’t forcing one gesture, but making all of those feel like the same action underneath.

    So the mental model becomes: “this goes into my inbox”, regardless of how I triggered it.

    That’s where things started to click for me.


  • Yeah exactly — that’s pretty much the pattern I kept falling into too.

    “Texting myself” works, but it still feels like you’re bending a tool to do something it wasn’t really designed for.

    What I was trying to fix was that exact moment before that — when something appears and you either capture it instantly… or lose it.

    So instead of choosing the tool each time, I tried to make the entry point always the same, and push the “what is this?” decision later.

    Curious if that resonates with how you use it day-to-day.



  • Good question 🙂

    For me it’s mostly the small, in-the-moment things:

    • a link I want to check later
    • a quick thought or idea
    • a snippet of text or code
    • something I see on my phone that I don’t want to lose
    • sometimes even just a reminder or “I should look into this”

    Not really structured notes — more like “things that appear during the day” that I don’t want to think about organizing right away.

    That’s also why tools like Joplin or OneNote never quite fit for me in that specific moment — they work great once you sit down to write something, but not as much as a quick, frictionless entry point.


  • Yeah that makes sense — treating a folder as the universal entry point is a clever way to unify things.

    I think that’s exactly the direction: trying to reduce everything to a single “drop zone”.

    Where I personally kept feeling friction is that you still need something in between to get things into that folder (scripts, gestures, automations, etc.).

    So the entry point becomes “save to this folder”, but the way you get there still depends on context.

    That’s the part I always found hard to make truly uniform.










  • Good question — I don’t mean organizing or saving things long-term.

    I mean that moment when you see or think something and don’t want to lose it.

    Like:

    • a link you want to check later
    • a sentence you read
    • a quick thought
    • something you copied
    • a small piece of info you might need

    The problem for me is that if capturing that takes more than a second, I often just don’t do it — or I postpone it and forget.

    So “capture” is really just that instant: taking something from wherever you are and storing it somewhere with zero friction.