Launching today

Ommer
Turn anything into a collectible, shareable card
7 followers
Turn anything into a collectible, shareable card
7 followers
Ommer turns transcripts, articles, or your own thinking into a single collectible card — seven sharp convictions distilled and rendered as AI-generated art, styled like a trading card. Drop in an interview, a set of notes, or just chat, and Ommer finds the ideas worth keeping. Every card gets a unique rarity rating (20 tiers), is instantly shareable via link, and needs no login to view - check the Explore page for examples.



Curious how the rarity tiers actually get assigned, is that based on how unique or original the conviction is across everyone's cards, or something else entirely?
@farukalayemdm Good question — rarity is judged on the idea itself, not compared against other cards in the system. The model evaluates how unusual/unexpected a conviction is on its own terms — a conventional, widely-held take scores lower than something sharp, specific, or counterintuitive. So it's about the substance of the idea, not how it stacks up against everyone else's cards.
How does the rarity tier actually get assigned - is it based on how unique the input content is, or some other signal you measure on the generated card itself?
@bilalstnteuv6m Good question — it's judged on the conviction itself, not measured against other cards in the system. The model looks at how unusual or unexpected a given idea is on its own terms — something conventional scores lower, something sharp or counterintuitive scores higher. So it's about the substance of that specific claim, not how rare it is relative to everyone else's Ommers.
The seven-conviction distillation feels genuinely useful, not just a gimmick — I tossed in a podcast transcript and it surfaced points I'd missed on a re-listen. The rarity tiers are a fun touch, though I'm curious if they end up meaning anything beyond collectibility.
@ayferi2xd Really glad it surfaced something you'd missed — that's exactly the use case I built it for. On rarity: it's judged on the idea itself (how unusual/sharp a given conviction is), not relative to other cards, so it's less "collectibility for its own sake" and more a signal of how conventional vs. distinctive the thinking was. Appreciate you testing it on something real like a podcast transcript rather than just a toy example.
the trading card framing makes the output feel like something you actually want to share, not just another summary sitting in a doc
@nurullahb53193 Really appreciate that — that's exactly the reaction I was hoping for. A summary you'd never open again vs. something you actually want to hold onto and send to someone.