Reentry articles
What should your saved things do after you save them?
Honest comparisons and practical guides about visual knowledge work, active memory, and AI that can work inside your context.
Digital hoarding: Why saved content costs more than time
Saving is not the problem. The problem is a collection that keeps growing while its useful ideas become harder to find, reconnect, and put to work.
Read the comparisonReentry vs Capacities: Automatic memory or object-based notes?
Capacities asks you to build a structured system of notes. Reentry understands what you drop, organizes it, brings it back, and puts it to work.
Read the comparisonReentry vs Heptabase: Which workspace fits the way you think?
Heptabase helps you study and map what you deliberately want to understand. Reentry starts earlier, when you save something before knowing why it might matter.
Read the comparisonReentry vs Notion: A team workspace or active personal memory?
Notion is a team workspace for documents, databases, and operations. Reentry is a local-first active memory that understands and acts on what you save.
Read the comparisonReentry vs Obsidian: Active memory or a toolkit you build?
Obsidian is a durable local Markdown toolkit with exceptional extensibility. Reentry is an opinionated visual workspace that enriches and resurfaces sources for you.
Read the comparisonReentry vs Recall: Which AI knowledge app fits your workflow?
Both apps summarize, connect, and teach from saved content. Reentry goes further by turning it into a visual workspace an agent can actively research and organize.
Read the comparisonPrivate beta