# Homescreen #3: The Never-Ending Search of a Knowledge Base

*I still don’t know which is going to be The One*

By [Homescreen](https://paragraph.com/@homescreen) · 2025-01-29

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_Welcome to the second issue of Homescreen, and Happy New Year! Here you can find ideas, thoughts and reasons why I choose which app deserves to stay on my phone and my tablet (and of course I didn’t write this today!)._

_This week, I give updates about my never ending search for a knowledge base app by trying a couple more apps and giving my honest take._

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The Never Ending Search
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In the [previous issue](https://paragraph.xyz/@homescreen/preview/HN8MZwhBdpP6HZvGFyLI), I talked about how I still can’t find the perfect read-it-later app, and how I settled for **Reader by Readwise** for the moment. The thing is, Reader is a perfect app - it just costs too much for my idea of how much an app like this could cost. It’s not open source, so I couldn’t customize just the way I like it if I wanted, but it’s overall a very good option, and I could see myself just keep using it for years - like I did for the past two.

The knowledge base app, instead is an open quest. I literally couldn’t find anything that pleases me enough to make me settle.

But first, two questions I feel I need to answer to put everything in the right context:

1) What’s a knowledge base app

2) What’s been my default so far

For those who don’t know it, a **knowledge base** is a system that lets you organize everything you find, read and save in a collection of sort. It’s different from the read-it-later app because the read-it-later app helps you _catch the flow of information,_ while the knowledge base helps you sediment the ideas in a more structured space.

That is, I could save articles I find through Reader feeds in a knowledge base, either if I read them or not. For me, an item for a knowledge base can be:

*   an article, but just in some cases
    
*   Wikipedia articles
    
*   X threads
    
*   E-commerce links
    
*   Screenshots
    
*   A collection of articles that I need to study and act on
    
*   Everything that I find useful to remember in an unspecified date
    

I tried a lot of apps over the past 10 years. I tried **Evernote** when I was in university, then I switched to **Google Drive** (!), then again I tried to use **Notion**, **Obsidian** and **Raindrop** and I still wasn’t satisfied. The reasons were:

1.  when I saved things, they were not rendered well, and I couldn’t just save ‘the link’
    
2.  When I could save just links there was no way to link them together
    
3.  When I could link them together, the system was too complex to maintain over time, and actually required more time to organize than to use it
    

This was years ago, and now I believe there’s a good chance that GPTs (AI) can solve 3., so that the bigger concatenated issue can be solved. I tried a couple of apps already that use AI to organize knowledge automatically.

Mymind is too expensive
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Mymind is an app that costs around 13$/month and lets you save any link from the share sheet on the iPhone, and it also has an iPad and a macOS app, a browser extension and a web app.

It is great because it uses AI to help you find things better, and automatically categorizes each item you save with a selection of tags and a brief AI summary, but it doesn’t render items in-app, meaning that you need to open the link in a browser on in the app you saved it from. This is tedious, because it means that I need to click more than once and it’s not fast if I need to quickly switch from one item to the other to reconstruct the steps of a thought I had, or simply to do research.

Also, its UI is not ideal: it displays items in boxes, very large boxes that are unnecessarily big in my opinion. And it costs 13$/month, which is even higher than **Readwise** which is less than 8$/month and I use it **way** more.

[save.space](http://save.space) is too simple
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I like save.space’s UI, it has small boxes for each item, and uses a similar AI that Mymind uses, but it only uses for summarizing items, and not for tagging them. Also, it’s only available for iPhone - there’s not even an iPad app, let alone a web app or a macOS one. And it’s also free, which I like, but it’s not that complete, at least not yet.

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So my quest for the ultimate, definitive knowledge base app continues. I’m now using Notion as a knowledge base for a side project that I started a few weeks ago, and that only works on Notion because I have a small data set, so it’s very doable, but it doesn’t work for an endless, unorganized mess of links like I do with ‘my mind.’

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_Thanks for reading!_

_If you find knowledge base apps worth looking at, don’t hesitate to shoot an email to_ [_hey@jaack.me_](mailto:hey@jaack.me)

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*Originally published on [Homescreen](https://paragraph.com/@homescreen/3)*
