Knowledgework.ai

Knowledgework.ai

Your digital second brain for productivity

4 followers

Announcing Knowledgework: a new type of productivity tool. It watches while you work, documenting everything you do by creating a Notion style hyperlinked knowledge base about your projects. It also tracks how you spend your time, and makes it all searchable.
Knowledgework.ai gallery image
Knowledgework.ai gallery image
Knowledgework.ai gallery image
Knowledgework.ai gallery image
Free
Launch Team / Built With
Flowstep
Flowstep
Generate real UI in seconds
Promoted

What do you think? …

Griffin Bishop
Hi ProductHunt! I've been working for a while now on Knowledgework.ai, and I'm excited to tell you about it. It's a new type of productivity tool and AI assistant that deeply understands what you're working on because it's watching everything you do. It's a desktop application that takes a screenshot every few seconds, uses powerful visual intelligence to extract knowledge, and organizes everything you're doing into 2 main features: the timeline and the wiki. The timeline is a log of how you've spent your time -- writing what documents, performing what research, coding X feature, etc. This is much more useful than something like Apple Screentime, for example, because it uses AI to contextualize what you're doing. It's been a game changer for my personal productivity -- and a bit jarring -- because it shows me a more objective view of my time, that doesn't always match my subjective perspective on how I spent my day. It also writes articles and organizes all the details of your projects into a hyperlinked wiki. This is a great way to make sure you never lose anything, and it's fun to click through. Ever go on wikipedia rabbit holes where you open like 16 tabs at once? This is like that, but personal to what you're working on. Finally, it all powers an AI assistant that actually understands what you're working on and where you're going. It knows why you're doing things, and it knows what you've already tried, and what didn't work before, because it's observing everything. Once you've used it for a while, it makes it actually useful for delegating entire tasks, in way that generic LLMs are unable to, because they don't have the right context. If you've ever tried to ask an LLM to perform some task, but realized you would have to explain your entire life / project nuances / team idiosyncracies to get something worthwhile, then this is for you!