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SAVING · 2 MIN

How to save things you find online so you can find them again

June 26, 2026 · 2 min read

How to save things you find online — articles, products, ideas — so future you can actually find them again.

The internet is full of things worth keeping. An article you want to read, a product you might buy, a post with an idea you don't want to lose. So you try to save things you find online — a bookmark here, a screenshot there, a link pasted into a note.

The saving feels productive. The finding, later, is where it falls apart. Your saves are spread across bookmarks, screenshots, chat threads, and open tabs, with no single place to look.

Future you doesn't want more saves. Future you wants to find the one thing that matters, right now.

Why the things you save online disappear

Every save goes somewhere different. A link goes to bookmarks, an image to your gallery, a quote to Notes. Each app has its own search, and none of them see the others.

Worse, most saves lose their context immediately. A bare link with no title tells you nothing six months later. A screenshot is just pixels — the text inside it isn't searchable unless something reads it for you.

You also save in a hurry, between one thing and the next. There's no time to write a note about why this mattered, so the reason evaporates and the save becomes a mystery you left for yourself.

So the collection grows while staying useless. You saved everything and can find nothing.

How to save things you find online and find them later

The trick is to send everything to one place that understands what you saved and lets you search by meaning, not keywords.

That means:

The point is to move the effort off future you. If the save writes its own title, files itself, and stays searchable, you never have to sit down and organize a backlog — because there isn't one.

When your saves carry their own context and share one search box, the pile turns into something you can actually use. If a lot of what you save is reading material, pair this with how to save links to read later.

Turn a pile into a place you search

A collection you can search is a completely different thing from a collection you scroll. Scrolling is a chore; searching is a shortcut.

When you can describe what you remember and get the exact item back — or ask a question and get an answer with its sources — the pile becomes a resource. That's the moment saving finally pays off.

Where Reminari fits

Reminari saves links, screenshots, and notes in one tap and reads the text inside each screenshot on your device with on-device OCR — no image leaves your phone for that step. Optional cloud AI, off anytime, writes titles, summaries, key points, and tags, sorts saves into folders, and lets you ask your vault a question and get an answer with its sources. You can also keep any item on-device only, and search by meaning.

Join the waitlist — Android first, iOS soon.

Save it now. Find it later.

Reminari is launching on Android. Be first in.

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