
why we built smart shelves (no more manual sorting)
manually organizing your books gets old fast
so this is basically: → auto updates → filters applied → no constant sorting
curious how people here organize their libraries

manually organizing your books gets old fast
so this is basically: → auto updates → filters applied → no constant sorting
curious how people here organize their libraries
saw this breakdown and it’s more about managing your library than just reading
curious how it compares to what people here are using~
curious where people land on this
is it the same as reading to you? or different?
most of it just fades over time
unless you do something to keep it alive
curious how people here deal with this
something about this kind of reading just hits different
no pressure, no optimization just enjoying the book
the knowledge was there… briefly
you KNOW it was good you just… can’t explain why anymore
Saw this on one of our blog posts and it stuck with me:
“Education is not just curriculum, but access, choice, and belonging…”
And the part about tech not being the transformation—but how it creates curiosity and connection.
Feels like most tools focus on delivery, not experience.
What do you think actually makes a learning tool good?
Saw this setup for organizing PhD reading + notes and it actually looks clean.
Using BookFusion for reading + highlights, then connecting it into Obsidian.
Curious if anyone here has a similar workflow or better setup?
Or do they just sit there forever?
no judgment lol
Feels like everyone highlights everything…
but how often do you actually go back to it?
That’s probably the real system.
Feels like reading in another language is way more effective than apps sometimes.
You get: • real context • vocabulary in use • chances to revisit words
Do you learn this way or stick to traditional apps?
Came across this review of BookFusion and it looks like it handles:
syncing across devices highlights + notes in one place a cleaner overall reading workflow
Most apps I’ve tried are decent on one device but fall apart across others.
Curious what people here are using.
Genuinely curious.
If you’re using it (or tried it), what do you think?
What’s missing / what would make it a no-brainer?
We are currently looking for multilingual volunteers to help translate the platform into more languages, with the goal of making collaborative and customizable reading accessible to more readers around the world.
If you participate, you can:
Contributors also receive:
The process is pretty simple:
A lot of accessibility starts with language and making knowledge easier to reach for more people.
If you were to translate for us, what language would you choose?