use cases
your second brain for the web
whatever you browse, watch, or read can be captured, summarized, and stored locally. over time, aura knows your context and helps you stay on top of meetings, tasks, and workflows — without sending your data away.
01
capture & remember
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save a page as a note — while reading, save to your library with a highlight or note. later, ask aura what you saved about a topic and get answers from your own content.
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summarize long content — select an article, thread, or pdf. get a short summary stored locally with the source url. no copy‑paste into another app.
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summarize videos and auto‑save — watch a talk or tutorial; trigger “summarize this video.” aura generates a summary and saves it in your library, linked to the url. next time you search, you get your summary.
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research library — save pdfs, links, and summaries into a workspace. everything is tagged and searchable. the browser can suggest “you saved something related to this page.”
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clip and highlight — highlight a paragraph; save as a clip with an optional note. clips are searchable and groupable by workspace or topic.
02
meetings & daily flow
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meeting prep — before a meeting, aura can surface saved pages related to the title or attendees, past notes on the same topic, and follow‑ups from last time.
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meeting notes — take notes inside aura or paste from elsewhere. notes stay local and can be linked to a calendar event or workspace. later: “what did we decide in the [project] meeting last week?”
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track meetings over time — see a timeline or list of meetings with linked notes and prep. no need to dig through email or docs.
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everyday log — optionally log what you worked on. over time, the browser can help with “what did I do last tuesday?” or “when did I last look at [topic]?” — all from local data.
03
workspaces & environments
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separate workspaces — create “work,” “phd research,” “learning spanish,” “side project.” save pages and notes into a workspace so they don’t mix. switch context when you switch workspace.
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workspace‑specific memory — in “work,” ai and search prioritize work saves; in “research,” they prioritize the research library. same browser, different context per workspace.
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clean separation — no accidental mixing of personal and work data; you choose where each capture goes.
04
automation & efficiency
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natural‑language shortcuts — “open my daily standup doc,” “open the repo for [project],” “save all links from this page to research.” the browser interprets intent using your local data.
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repetitive workflows — record or define a flow (e.g. open jira → filter my issues → copy summary). re‑run with one command or on a schedule. execution stays on‑device.
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form filling from your data — “fill this form with my contact info” or “use the summary from my last meeting notes for this field.” data is read from your local notes.
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bulk actions — “export everything I saved in research this month as markdown,” “tag all pages from last week as ‘q1 review.’”
05
search & recall
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search over your data only — “what did I save about machine learning?” or “summaries that mention ‘budget.’” results from your library and notes, not the open web unless you choose.
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temporal recall — “what was I looking at when preparing for [event]?” or “pages I visited last month about [topic].” history + saved items + notes form a queryable timeline.
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cross‑link suggestions — while reading a new page, aura suggests “you have 2 saved notes and 1 meeting note related to this.” one click to open.
06
learning & long‑term use
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learning trails — save a sequence of articles, videos, or courses under a path. the browser tracks progress and can remind you “you haven’t continued your [topic] path in 2 weeks.”
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spaced repetition — optionally turn saved facts or summaries into review prompts. reviews are local and private.
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reflection and journaling — optional daily or weekly prompts based on what you browsed or saved, with answers stored locally.
who it's for
researchers and students who need to capture papers, videos, and threads and reuse them later. knowledge workers who live in the browser and want one place for tabs, notes, meetings, and recall. privacy‑conscious users who want ai assistance without sending history or documents to the cloud. anyone who forgets what they read or where they saved something — and wants a browser that remembers.
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