I kept coming back to the idea that the “act” shouldn’t be something new you have to learn — it should reuse what you’re already doing in each context.
So instead of one single physical gesture, it’s more like a single intent expressed through different native actions:
on mobile → share
on desktop → paste
in browser → bookmarklet
sometimes even just typing something and sending it
The key (for me) wasn’t forcing one gesture, but making all of those feel like the same action underneath.
So the mental model becomes: “this goes into my inbox”, regardless of how I triggered it.
Yeah I used the “message to self” approach for a while too — it works surprisingly well 🙂
What I ended up building is basically a very minimal “capture layer”, where no matter the context (share, paste, shortcut, etc.), everything goes into the same place instantly, without deciding upfront what it is or where it belongs.
It’s not really a note-taking tool — more like a universal entry point.
For me it’s mostly the small, in-the-moment things:
a link I want to check later
a quick thought or idea
a snippet of text or code
something I see on my phone that I don’t want to lose
sometimes even just a reminder or “I should look into this”
Not really structured notes — more like “things that appear during the day” that I don’t want to think about organizing right away.
That’s also why tools like Joplin or OneNote never quite fit for me in that specific moment — they work great once you sit down to write something, but not as much as a quick, frictionless entry point.
Yeah that makes sense — treating a folder as the universal entry point is a clever way to unify things.
I think that’s exactly the direction: trying to reduce everything to a single “drop zone”.
Where I personally kept feeling friction is that you still need something in between to get things into that folder (scripts, gestures, automations, etc.).
So the entry point becomes “save to this folder”, but the way you get there still depends on context.
That’s the part I always found hard to make truly uniform.
What always got me personally is exactly that — over time I’d end up with multiple “entry points” depending on context (screenshot, chat, browser, notes…).
Each one works, but I’d still need to mentally switch between them depending on what I’m capturing.
I kept wishing for something where the entry point is always the same, no matter the context.
Shortcuts work (that’s what I’m using on iOS right now), but they can feel a bit “indirect” compared to something more native like share sheets or drag & drop.
Curious to hear how it feels once you try it — especially what feels frictionless vs what doesn’t.
Yeah I tried going the “second brain” route too (Trilium, Obsidian, etc.)
What I kept running into is that they’re great once something is already in the system — but capturing still feels like a separate step where you have to think about where it belongs.
I started wondering if capturing should be completely independent from organization, and almost “context-free”.
More like a thin layer you can hit instantly from anywhere, without deciding anything upfront.
Yeah — that’s exactly the feeling I kept running into.
At some point I stopped trying to adapt existing tools and ended up building something around this idea of “uniform capture”.
It’s basically a very minimal layer where you can send anything (text, links, quick notes, etc.) from any device in one step — without worrying about where it goes or how it’s structured.
Still early, but it’s been working surprisingly well for me in daily use.
Just pushed a small update based on real usage feedback.
Fixed a couple of issues (attachments cleanup + clipboard counts) and improved the Apple Shortcut for multiple items.
Still keeping things simple and focused on fast capture.