Raindrop is a beautiful filing cabinet. But if you save faster than you can file, the folders just become another backlog. Zihin is the alternative for people who want their saves to organize — and resurface — themselves.
Raindrop.io does one thing extremely well: manual organization. You drop links into nested collections, tag them by hand, and get a tidy library — as long as you keep filing. The moment you fall behind, an unsorted "Inbox" of hundreds of links grows exactly like the browser bookmarks bar you were trying to escape.
| Raindrop.io | Zihin | |
|---|---|---|
| Organizing | You file links into collections by hand | Auto-tags, topic and category on every save |
| Finding | Keyword search + folders | Search by meaning + chat with cited answers |
| Remembering | Nothing resurfaces on its own | Decay scoring brings back saves going cold |
| Sources | Links you add | X + LinkedIn saves and Chrome bookmarks, synced |
Zihin's core idea is that filing is the wrong job for a human. So it does the filing: every bookmark gets a tag, a topic, and a category the moment it arrives. You never touch a folder. When you need something, you don't browse a tree — you ask, and Zihin answers from your own saves, citing the exact bookmarks it used.
Switching doesn't mean starting over. Zihin accepts a JSON import, and its extension pulls in your existing Chrome bookmarks too — so your library comes with you and immediately gets tagged and ranked.
Start free — no credit cardFree during beta — AI included, until Aug 31.