Chat-style capture
Save the way you already text yourself, with no visual board to curate and no workspace to structure.
Head to head
mymind and Fabric both use AI so you can save without manually organizing, but they build toward different goals: one is a visual memory board, the other is an AI-organized file and link workspace. Here is how they actually differ, and a third option if what you actually want is fast, chat-style capture.
mymind and Fabric (fabric.so) both promise the same basic thing: save it, let AI organize it, and skip the folders and tags. That similarity is exactly why they get compared, even though search volume for this pairing is small. Fewer people search it, but almost nobody else has written an honest comparison of the two, which makes it worth doing carefully.
Under that shared promise, the two tools point in different directions. mymind is built around a visual, private memory board: images, quotes, links, and inspiration you browse. Fabric is built around an AI-organized workspace for files, links, and notes, closer to a personal knowledge base than a moodboard.
| Feature | Fabric | |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Visual inspiration and private moodboards | AI-organized file and link workspace |
| Core approach | Visual grid, AI auto-tagging | AI-organized workspace for files, links, and notes |
| Capture speed | Fast, save-and-forget | Fast, save-and-forget |
| Organization model | No manual folders, AI auto-sorts visually | No manual folders, AI organizes files and links |
| AI search | Yes, across saved images, links, and notes | Yes, across files, links, and notes |
| Tasks and reminders | ✕ No | ✕ No |
| Voice notes | ✕ No | ✕ No |
| Free plan | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Platforms | Web, iOS, browser extension | Web, browser extension |
Both mymind and Fabric solve the same real problem: manual organizing is annoying, so let AI handle it. Where they differ from a chat-style inbox is the shape of the save itself. mymind centers on a visual board you browse. Fabric centers on a workspace of files and links you search. Neither is built around the habit a lot of people actually have: texting themselves a thought the moment it happens.
Luckynote takes that habit as the starting point. You send yourself a note, link, screenshot, file, or voice memo the same way you would message a friend, and AI-assisted search makes all of it findable later, the same underlying idea mymind and Fabric use, applied to a chat-style inbox instead of a visual board or a file workspace.
The practical difference shows up in what else the saved item can become. Luckynote adds tasks and reminders on top of capture, so a saved item can turn into something you actually follow up on, not just something that stays findable. Neither mymind nor Fabric is built around that follow-through step today.
If your priority is a beautiful, browsable archive of visual inspiration, mymind remains a strong, distinctive choice. If your priority is an AI-organized workspace closer to a personal knowledge base, Fabric is worth a serious look. If your priority is capturing everyday thoughts, links, and voice notes as fast as sending a text, and occasionally turning one into a task, that is the gap Luckynote is built to fill.
Save the way you already text yourself, with no visual board to curate and no workspace to structure.
Notes, links, screenshots, files, and voice notes all land together and stay searchable with AI.
Turn a saved item into a task when it needs action, instead of leaving everything as passive archive.
Not exactly. Both use AI to organize what you save without manual folders, but mymind is built around a visual memory board while Fabric is built around an AI-organized workspace for files, links, and notes.
mymind. It is specifically designed as a private, visual moodboard for images, quotes, and links you want to browse, not just search.
Fabric leans more toward a workspace for files, links, and notes, closer to a personal knowledge base than a visual board.
Yes, both offer a free plan to start, with paid plans unlocking more storage and features.
No, neither is built around voice notes or task management. Both are focused on saving and AI-assisted organization of what you save.
Yes. Luckynote takes a similar AI-organized approach but starts from chat-style capture: message yourself notes, links, screenshots, files, and voice notes, and add tasks and reminders on top.
Pick mymind if your saves are mostly visual and you want a beautiful board to browse. Pick Fabric if your saves lean toward files, links, and reference material and you want something closer to a searchable workspace.
Both are designed to be low-friction, save-first tools with minimal setup. mymind's interface centers on a visual grid, while Fabric's centers on organizing links and files, so ease of use often comes down to which format matches how you think.
Fabric is generally the better fit for research material like documents, articles, and reference links. mymind can hold research too, but it is optimized more for visual and inspirational saves.
No. Both mymind and Fabric focus on capture and AI-assisted retrieval. Turning a saved item into a task or reminder is not part of either app today.
Keep the fast capture habit, but give yourself a better place to return to later.