If you think about it, 99% of the internet's value is just URLs. A groundbreaking AI paper, a brilliant Figma UI kit, a GitHub repo, or a YouTube tutorial they all boil down to a simple string starting with https://.
Like many of you, I suffer from digital hoarding. My browser bookmarks were a black hole. "Read it later" essentially meant "Save it forever and never look at it again." I tried moving them to Notion, Obsidian, and Raindrop, but the friction of tagging and organizing always defeated me.
I realized my fundamental approach to Personal Knowledge Management (PKM) for links was wrong.
The Shift in Mindset: From "Storage" to "Dashboards" Links shouldn't be buried in hierarchical folders; they should be visualized as active, curated dashboards. But I couldn't find a tool that was both completely private (no SaaS lock-in) and smart enough to organize the mess for me.
No backend, fully open-source. Organize your links and generate an `index.html` navigation page.The editor itself is a pure local HTML file with no dependencies.The index.html generated by NaviCube is not just a final, viewable page. Need to make changes?Just drag the index.html back into NaviCube to continue editing.