Zo vs MyMind
MyMind is a beautiful app for saving bookmarks, articles, images, and ideas. It uses AI to automatically organize everything, so you can just save things and find them later without manual filing.
But there's a question lurking beneath the surface: what happens to all that content you're saving?
The Link Rot Problem
According to a 2024 Pew Research study, 25% of web pages that existed between 2013 and 2023 are now gone. An Ahrefs study found 66.5% of links over a nine-year period were dead.
That article you bookmarked? It might be a 404 by next year.
MyMind saves bookmarks beautifully. It caches previews and screenshots. But the underlying content still lives on someone else's server. When that server goes away, so does the content – regardless of how nicely your bookmark was organized.
What MyMind Does Well
MyMind excels at:
Visual organization: Cards for articles, products, images, videos, tweets
AI tagging: Automatically categorizes and tags everything
Image text recognition: Search for text within screenshots
Smart spaces: Auto-groups related saves
Beautiful interface: Genuinely pleasant to use
Privacy-focused: Encrypted, not shared
For visual thinkers who want effortless organization, MyMind is appealing.
MyMind's Limitations
But there are real constraints:
Export limitations: Exports to individual files + CSV, but Chrome/Edge only
No re-import: Once you export, you can't bring data back in
Metadata loss: Tags and organization may not survive export
Bookmarks, not archives: You're saving pointers to content, not the content itself
Closed ecosystem: Limited integrations, no API access
Pricing: $7.99/month (Student of Life) or $12.99/month (Mastermind).
How Zo Approaches This Differently
We wrote a whole blog post about this: How to save a webpage forever.
The key insight: if you want content to exist in 10 years, save the actual content, not a link to it.
When you save an article on Zo:
Zo fetches the page
Extracts the content
Converts to clean markdown
Saves it as a file you own
The webpage now exists as a file on your server. It will still be readable in 20 years, long after the original site might be gone. Markdown is simple, portable, and universal.
Beyond Bookmarks
The bigger difference: Zo is a computer, not just a bookmark app.
With your saved articles on Zo, you can:
Ask questions: "What did that article about productivity say about time blocking?"
Generate summaries: Get key points without re-reading
Find connections: Surface related articles across your collection
Build tools: Create custom apps to explore topics
Run automations: Auto-save articles from newsletters, RSS feeds, etc.
Your archive becomes queryable knowledge, not just organized links.
The Always-On Advantage
MyMind requires you to actively save things. Zo can work in the background:
Set up an agent to save articles from your favorite newsletters
Auto-extract transcripts from YouTube videos you like
Monitor topics and save relevant content automatically
Get a daily digest of what's been archived
"Lowkey just used my Zo. I wanted to web scrape something to read but was on mobile, but already knew a GitHub project for it. So I just told Zo to use the project and send the result to me."
A Place for Your Stuff
The deeper point isn't about articles specifically. It's about having a place for your stuff.
MyMind gives you a beautiful place to save things – but it's still someone else's place. When the service changes (or shuts down), you scramble to export.
Zo gives you your own server. Files go there. They stay there. You can use whatever tools you want to access them.
Pricing
MyMind:
Student of Life: $7.99/month ($79/year)
Mastermind: $12.99/month
Zo:
Plans start at $18/month
Includes AI, storage (100GB), automation, and everything else
Get Started
Ready to save content you actually own? Try Zo Computer and start building your permanent archive.