 So this may be the outside of the engineering domain, like hard, hard engineering, it's probably more of an kind of an adjacent or supportive tool for your work in particular for workflows where you need to read and research websites, papers, GitHub logs, whatever that you need to either do by yourself or with other people. Where things become really tricky doing that. So maybe some of you already have been running into these issues where, for example, you had, you wanted to save something, you need to copy paste links around, you need to copy paste text sections around, you have all these graveyards of documents all over the place with information that was really important. And it becomes messier and messier in particular, if you have to collaborate with other people. So it's already a problem if you buy yourself, but it's going to get exponentially worse if you have to do any sort of like reading together, papers, websites, etc. And so we built Memex to make that a bit easier. And yeah, I'm just going to start with the more personal organization parts. So how do you keep track of the things you read online? And the next section will be how do you do that collaboratively? So yeah, the most basic thing you need to do here with Memex is that if you want to save an article, you just press on save. And from that point on, it's full text searchable. So that means you can find it even if you didn't put any organization on top. You can find it by all the words inside the article. So I'm just copy this word right now, and then you just press M space into the address bar and you can search for dialogues. It finds all the articles with dialogues. You see the first one is a startle, but you can also get to dashboard where you can see a full overview of all the articles you saved or apply more filters, for example, the timeframe, the domain it was on, or maybe spaces you put in and spaces are for us a bit like tags with a difference that you can also share them or collaboratively curate them. But yeah, you don't have to not organize. You can also do some organization with that. And soon also, you're going to have the ability to have nested spaces so you can create trees that are present your folder structures that you maybe have in your bookmarks or that you just want to organize things by project. The next thing that you can do with my max is that you can also highlight an entity. So if you want to mark up a piece of text, you just make a highlight here. You can also mark up a piece of text and add a comment to it. Hey, this is important. Like this. Works also with papers. So if we're going to an archive paper, for example, and also works by the way with papers that are also stored local. So if you want to annotate a locally annotated pf, you just drag it into a browser and do the same thing. I just did open the reader where you can start annotating in Max. And then you just highlight a piece of text, same thing. And I'm actually right in this very moment. And hopefully by tomorrow or latest on Monday, you're going to also be able to drag rectangles that create screenshots and that also anchor so you can also annotate illustrations, et cetera, that are hard to capture in pure text. And the last content piece that you can annotate is YouTube videos. Oops, so they're there. You can either create timestamp notes so you can create like sections, like times, time stamps with sections of the video. If you click on those timestamps, it actually will jump back and forth in the video to the places you want to annotate. The second thing is you can do smart notes, which essentially summarizes for you the last X seconds of the video. So if you don't want to type it up, what's in the video, you can just let it like I do the thing for you. You can also decide on how many seconds you want to include in that summary. And you can also summarize the entire video, by the way, we have an AI assistant that allows you to basically say, hey, I want to, for example, tell me the key takeaways of this video and it will just go and analyze the video and give you a summary. And you can prompt it however you want to, ultimately. And the last bit is that you can also make screenshot based annotations. So you can say, I want to get a snapshot of the current frame, including a timestamp and make a note there, because sometimes you want to capture, for example, yeah, maybe an important like graphic or so they used in the video, et cetera. And on the last piece of the personal organization stuff is that you, since two days ago, you also have now an obsidian and a loxic integration that automatically syncs all the things you save and annotate into your graphs. Also, if you use any of those, we can just go. How I learned to stop worrying about nuclear waste, you see here, it's automatically already there. It's actually like super snappy. So if I add a new note here, you'll see how fast it will be here. Oh, that's it. Like it's very fast. Luckily, because well, obsidian obsidian is great infrastructure and architecture is so close, like to the file system. That's this. It's just very fast. And we just save our updates to the file system, which is in this case, a big advantage, which also would be a big advantage actually to use something like that with IPFS powered tools, because you just need to write to the disk and that's it. We have a kind of a local backup helper. That allows you to like really quickly save anything to local disk with it. And it's going to be also a bit of a jumping point later for API connections that you want to do somewhere else, maybe in other apps that you want to integrate. We also in that local backup helper had a while ago, a little prototype for actually hooking IPFS natively. So if someone wants to revive this and make memex more natively working with IPFS, just hit me up and we can chat about it. So yeah, these were the... Oh, damn it. You didn't actually see my... I just realized you didn't see the sync to obsidian because that part of the screen was not shared. But yeah, it's very snappy. It's basically going there and I want to show it because it makes a lot of sense. So for example, if I add now a note here, this is always obsidian. If I add a note here, you see how fast it's here. It's really quick. It's like instant, essentially. And here are all the notes and the screenshots that I made already before. And those are also links to the YouTube video section. So you will always get back from that particular time stamp because it's all marked down. Yeah, interoperability. Great. Yeah, so the last bit I want to show is how do you collaborate? And this might be for people who have this workflow of needing to often share, for example, commentary on the things you read. Maybe you want to discuss a paper in depth with other people and you want to have a quick way of doing that without needing to spam your chat logs or without copy pasting the content of the paper into Google Doc and starting there, which I heard a lot of people do. And so in order to start annotating a page together, the only thing you need to do here is really pressing on share page. What that will do is create a link to that page with annotations on that page that you had there. In this case, the annotations that I already created before were private, so then I'll automatically add it there, but I can add them there. But all the annotations that I'm now adding while I'm in this what we call focus mode will automatically be added there. I'm just doing this right now quickly. And then if I take that link here, I can invite people to either have read access or have contribute access. And when they open this link, they will get to our web reader, which is a renderer for the annotations that they can use, even if they don't use memex. So this is the view that someone sees that does not use memex as the extension. They can see your highlights. They can even make their own highlights on top of it. See that? Had a comment. Whatever. And they don't need to install anything. You just send them a link is basically our design objective was making it as easy as working on a Google Doc when you want to collaborate with other people. That's the workflow for just one page. If you want to, for example, share an entire research collection. So say, for example, yeah, you have you want to dive into some new machine learning technique and you want to collect a bunch of papers, a bunch of websites, a bunch of videos. You can do that by using the spaces I hinted at before. Let me find one. For example, here's one where those can also be shared. You can open them in a web view. This is links that people can open. Again, if they don't use memex, they see all your links here and see all the annotations here. If they click on those results, they get to that reader I showed before. And they can also summarize the articles straight from here. So they can get a kind of a skimmable overview of the things you put in without needing to read every single piece that you put in there. Yeah. That's it. That was memex. If you want to get started with it, check it out at memex.garden. So memex.garden. This, there you can download it. We're actually just about to start out of our close beta. So this is really timely to present it today. But we already have to sign up and log in and download it's open already. So check it out. Enjoy.