- Notes in physical books are hard to digitize without introducing significant friction.
- People rarely revisit their notes due to poor organization, leading to notes being dumped into files that quickly become gigantic, unusable, and eventually forgotten.
- Organizing notes requires a lot time and work.
We are solving this by creating a system for the entire note-taking process. We make digitization easy with OCR and UX for selecting the desired text. Post-digitization, we use LLMs to effectively organize the content into an organized database.
We categorize content by creating several layers of information that can be used at different times for different purposes:
- Title: A short, one-sentence description of the entire note. This is very useful when searching through many notes.
- Summary: A single paragraph that distills the information, acting as a thumbnail of the captured information.
- Tags: Allows grouping notes based on common topics, regardless of the source.
The goal is a system to make content as easy and efficient to navigate and use as possible, automating the process to save time and effort.
To start with we’re targeting book readers, as this is the most straightforward application. However, we plan to expand this system to accommodate various types of content, including academic papers, articles, podcasts, and more.
We’re launching our MVP and gathering feedback from our first users. If you’re interested, you can try it here: https://ravenapp.ai
Any feedback is very welcome!
doesn't seem like I can try it. There's a screen that pops up saying I need to make an account.
Nevertheless, I understand your point. We agree that having the option to try the app without creating an account would be ideal, and it's in our roadmap.
The average user leave web pages in 10-20 seconds unless you provide a clear value proposition to hold their attention.
I can make a account, and I can give you my email ... But why should I? What exactly even is Raven? The webpage tells me nothing, yet you think I am going to give over my email information (and name etc that's pulled from Google OAuth) ... for what again?
> We agree that having the option to try the app without creating an account would be ideal, and it's in our roadmap.
Not even that. Make a landing page. Stick a few screenshots on it, make a loom video. Anything that shows me what I am even signing up to.
More so, you're targeting developers, on HN. That's a more privacy focused crowd. No Privacy Policy. No contact information. No proof that my data won't be sold to some random company is not a great way to gain trust.
People generally don't blindly sign up for apps which expose exactly nothing about themselves or their privacy policies
Get that going and repost!
Dead Comment