# Vision ## The "Why" Behind Minne Personal knowledge management has always fascinated me. I wanted something that made it incredibly easy to capture content—snippets of text, URLs, media—while automatically discovering connections between ideas. But I also wanted control over my knowledge structure. Traditional tools like Logseq and Obsidian are excellent, but manual linking often becomes a hindrance. Fully automated systems sometimes miss important context or create relationships I wouldn't have chosen. Minne offers the best of both worlds: effortless capture with AI-assisted relationship discovery, but with flexibility to manually curate, edit, or override connections. Let AI handle the heavy lifting, take full control yourself, or use a hybrid approach where AI suggests and you approve. ## Design Principles - **Capture should be instant** — No friction between thought and storage - **Connections should emerge** — AI finds relationships you might miss - **Control should be optional** — Automate by default, curate when it matters - **Privacy should be default** — Self-hosted, your data stays yours ## Roadmap ### Near-term - [ ] TUI frontend with system editor integration - [ ] Enhanced retrieval recall via improved reranking - [ ] Additional content type support (e-books, research papers) ### Medium-term - [ ] Embedded SurrealDB option (zero-config `nix run` with just `OPENAI_API_KEY`) - [ ] Browser extension for seamless capture - [ ] Mobile-native apps ### Long-term - [ ] Federated knowledge sharing (opt-in) - [ ] Local LLM integration (fully offline operation) - [ ] Plugin system for custom entity extractors ## Related Projects If Minne isn't quite right for you, check out: - [Karakeep](https://github.com/karakeep-app/karakeep) (formerly Hoarder) — Excellent bookmark/read-later with AI tagging - [Logseq](https://logseq.com/) — Outliner-based PKM with manual linking - [Obsidian](https://obsidian.md/) — Markdown-based PKM with plugin ecosystem ## Contributing Feature requests and contributions are welcome. Minne was built for personal use first, but the self-hosted community benefits when we share.