Memory Home
Your home screen is a canvas for capturing thoughts and reviewing what your memory surfaces for you.
The memory home page has two layers. The top layer is your capture canvas — a calm, open space to write, paste, or upload anything you want to remember. Below it is a signals layer that shows you what your memory thinks is worth your attention right now.
Design philosophy: Memory is a place you arrive at to think — not a dashboard you scan. The capture surface is always front and center.
Capture surface
The headline asks: "What do you want to remember?" Below it is a text area where you can start typing immediately. Capture is designed to be instant — you type, hit enter, and move on. Woxpas processes your input in the background without blocking anything.
Four ways to capture
How it works: When you capture something, it's added to your memory immediately. In the background, Woxpas extracts key ideas, entities, topics, commitments, and events — then connects them to the rest of your knowledge graph.
Quick tips panel
The first time you visit the home page, you'll see a small panel with quick tips to help you get oriented: uploading files, asking questions, the daily digest, and privacy. You can dismiss it with the X button and it won't appear again.
Thinking
Below the capture surface, you'll see a section marked with a green pulsing dot labelled THINKING. This shows 2-3 items that represent what your memory considers most relevant right now — active connections and patterns that deserve your attention.
What appears here
Thinking items can be any type from your memory:
Each item shows its type, title, and a short reason explaining why it's being surfaced. Click any item to jump to it — entities open in the knowledge graph, commitments go to follow-ups, and files go to sources.
Stability: Thinking items stay the same for about an hour so they don't shift around while you're working. They refresh naturally when you come back later.
Echoes
Below the thinking section, you'll find Echoes — items that have been surfaced before (in your daily digest, through resurfacing, or via pattern detection) but are still worth revisiting. Think of them as unresolved signals from your memory.
Each echo shows where it originally came from with a small icon:
The echoes section is collapsible. When there are no unresolved echoes, it shows a simple "You're up to date" message.
Emerging
Inside the echoes section, there's a nested area called Emerging. These are early-stage signals — patterns that are still forming in your memory but haven't reached full confidence yet.
Emerging signals have types that describe what's happening:
Emerging items appear slightly muted compared to regular echoes, reflecting their lower confidence. They become more prominent as more evidence builds up. The section starts expanded for newer vaults and collapsed for mature ones to reduce noise.
Resurfaced memories
Woxpas uses a memory decay model to figure out which items are worth bringing back to your attention. Resurfaced memories appear in the notification bell in the top bar and in your daily digest.
Each resurfaced item includes a "why now" badge explaining the reason:
The resurfacing algorithm considers importance, how long since you last saw something, temporal relevance, what you're currently focused on, and a small element of serendipity. Items have a cooldown period so the same thing won't keep appearing in consecutive days.