The Ultimate Recall Tutorial: Take Control of Content & Build Your Lifelong Knowledge Base
By Recall
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Pre-screen content before committing**: Use Recall's browser extension to generate concise summaries of videos or articles. This allows you to quickly determine if the content is worth your time before investing hours in it. [01:25], [01:36] - **AI automatically categorizes your saved content**: When you save content into Recall, the AI can automatically categorize it based on existing tags in your knowledge base, saving you manual organization effort. [03:17], [03:24] - **Chat with your entire knowledge base**: Recall allows you to have conversations with all the personal content you've saved, not just the general internet. You can ask it to create routines, optimize focus, or combine expert advice with your personal journals. [08:47], [09:23] - **Visualize content connections**: Recall builds a knowledge graph by extracting keywords and linking them across your saved content. This visual representation helps you see how different pieces of information relate to each other, even across disparate topics. [11:22], [11:40] - **Personalized learning schedule with spaced repetition**: The Recall review feature utilizes active recall and spaced repetition to create a personalized learning schedule. It shows you content more frequently if you get answers incorrect and less frequently if you answer correctly, helping to combat the forgetting curve. [16:23], [16:40]
Topics Covered
- How to filter fluff and retain insights efficiently?
- Chat with content, not the internet, for deep insights.
- AI personalizes your knowledge to reveal unique patterns.
- Augmented browsing resurfaces forgotten knowledge contextually.
- Beat the forgetting curve with AI-powered active recall.
Full Transcript
We've probably spent hours this week
watching videos, listening to podcasts,
reading articles, but how much of it was
actually worth our time? And how much
was just fluff? You know, that 2-hour
long podcast where the real takeaway
only hits at minute 57. And then what
about the things we care about when it's
scattered across bookmarks, notes,
messages to yourself? How do you find it
when you need it most? Well, with the
recall, you can pre-screen content
before you commit to it. save it all in
one personal knowledge base, searchable
and accessible forever. I'm Suns, one of
the co-founders of Recall. And what
you're looking at is my personal Recall
knowledge base. I have over 3,000 pieces
of content saved. My favorite movies,
recipes, podcasts that I don't want to
forget. All automatically categorized
and searchable forever. And in the next
few minutes, I'm going to show you how
to get your own personal knowledge base
up and running. Now, you can access
Recall via the web app, which is what
you've seen now. But we also have a
mobile app, which is great for when
you're out and about. And one of my
personal favorite ways to access Recall
is via the browser extension. So, I
highly recommend that when you're on
desktop, one of the first things to do
is to go ahead and install the
extension.
Once it's installed, I do recommend that
you pin the extension so it sits on your
toolbar and it's easy to access. Now,
when you come to a really long form
piece of content and you're not so sure
if it's worth your time, you can just go
ahead and click the recall browser
extension and you can see it creates a
really nice concise summary of the video
which you can use to skim through and
see if it's something that you're
interested in or in this case I would
even just get to the point and ask a
question. So, in this case,
why is fasting bad for women? and you
get an answer based on the actual video.
So, this isn't a conversation with the
internet, it's with the actual piece of
content. I might skim through this and
if I find it interesting, I'm going to
go ahead and add it to my notebook. So,
just an overview of what's in the
extension. The notebook is where that
automatic summary was saved. It's also
where your AI actions are saved. So, now
this conversation, this chat is saved
into the notebook. It's also fully
editable. Now you also have the reader.
The reader is the full original content.
So in this case it's the full YouTube
transcript. And there's also a
connections tab which automatically
extracts content and connects it
together. But we'll get deeper into
connections in a minute. Coming back to
the notebook, what I really love is
these timestamps. So I can skip to
particular parts of the video. That's
interesting. Before I do that though,
I've clicked this little lock button. So
when I skip to particular parts, the
extension doesn't move. I can just use
it to navigate to certain sections while
keeping the extension side by side.
Again, I mentioned the notebook is
editable. So if I see something
interesting, I can come in, highlight, I
can take my own notes. So you can really
use it as a typical editor. Now when I
save the content into recall, you can
see that it's been automatically
categorized as health female physiology.
Now, I didn't add that tag. The AI
figured out what the right tag would be.
And that's because I already have a big
category called health, and I have a
subcategory called female physiology,
and it figured out that was a great way
to store that content. If you weren't
happy with it, you can drag and drop it
into other sections. You can also just
delete it and add your own tag. I do
recommend checking out one of our deep
dive videos or our docs on tags just so
you can learn a little bit more about
how to fully customize your tag. Now,
let's spend a little bit of time with
what's happened now that you've saved
this content into recall. You have a
title. It's fully editable. You have a
link to the original source. We have
tags which we just covered. And you also
are looking at a split screen view where
I have my notebook on the left hand side
and my reader on the right. Now, this
view is fully customizable. If you'd
rather, let's say, have connections on
the right, you can drag and drop it into
place. If you're finding that the split
screen view is quite overwhelming, maybe
you prefer just a single screen, you can
click that little arrow and it will just
compress it into a single screen with
all of your tabs. The tabs itself can
also drag and dropped into a different
place, so you can customize that as
well. As a recap, I've got my notebook
here and everything I did in the
extension, the highlights, the notes,
it's automatically synced with what I've
now saved in my knowledge base. And I've
got the reader, that's the original
content, and chat is now its own tab. A
couple things to note. If you want to
switch between that concise summary to a
detailed summary, you can just select
that default action.
And when you're ready to save it, you
can just go ahead and add it to the
notebook. So that's a quick way for you
to quickly switch between a detailed or
a concise summary. You can also change
that in your settings. So if you always
prefer a detailed summary, you can
configure that in your settings. A few
other things, we have that connections
tab we've mentioned. We've got a quiz.
So if you wanted to rejoin off that
content, you can generate an AI quiz and
just put your knowledge to the test. And
there's also a graph view, but I'll get
more into that in a bit more detail
later. Couple other things while we're
here. You can share your content with
anyone. So, you can copy this link. It's
then live and no one needs to sign up,
but they can access the summary. They
can access your notes and the full
original content. You can also adjust
your font size if you prefer something
larger, something smaller. And you can
also always export this content to
markdown or even change the images. So
if you don't like the header, upload
another image and make that your own
image. Or you can add your own images to
the notebook itself. Now there are many
other ways that you can add content into
recall. You can just come into the app,
click add content, and then paste in the
URL of any online content, podcasts,
articles, videos, and there's a lot more
that we're looking to support. You can
also just use quick search on Wikipedia.
I love to do this when I'm adding
movies. So, my favorite movie, Burn
After Reading. It then saves the recall
card. It categorizes it as movie and it
also pulls in the full Wikipedia page.
I can also upload PDFs, so up to 100
megabyte PDFs. And I can also bulk
import, which is just a great way to get
a lot of content into recall almost
instantly. So you can import up to a
thousand bookmarks, import from Pocket,
or even import up to 10,000 markdown
files. And that's just a great way to
just speed up building up your knowledge
base. And you can also just create your
own notes. So you can come in here, put
a title in, take some notes, and it's
also able to enable you to chat with
your own notes. So have a conversation
with your own notes. You can even quiz
yourself on your own notes. and you'll
be surprised on how much you actually
can get wrong even quizzing yourself on
notes you've taken yourself. I
personally love to take my own notes
when it comes to my journals and then I
will chat with all of them to pick up
patterns or trends that I might miss
myself. Another tip is to share content
directly with recall when you're on the
mobile app. So, you can just share any
online content directly with the Recall
mobile app and it will automatically
create that summary, tag it, and it's a
great way to build up your knowledge
base while you're on the go. Making our
way back to the homepage, I do want to
get you familiar with how to navigate
your recall knowledge base. So, you can
sort your cards in a few different ways.
We have a list view if you prefer
something more compact and you can also
order it by alphabetical order or last
created at a couple different options
there. If you click this little arrow on
the left side, it expands your tags. Now
tags again is just a way to organize
content within recall. If I then select
health, all my content in the main view
is then filtered on what's saved in
health. I can then just click clear and
that takes me back to my homepage. I can
also just collapse it if I want more
space. On the left hand panel, we now
have access to some of our features that
now pertain to the whole knowledge base.
So, previously we've been looking at
features on a specific card. But some of
our most powerful features is when you
take all that information you've saved
and you can access it at once. Which
brings us to my all-time favorite
feature, chat with knowledge base.
With chat GPT, you're having a
conversation with the entire internet.
But with recall, you're having a
conversation with all the personal
content that you've been saving. So to
get started here, one of the first
things I recommend is just setting some
context. You can click this add button
and then select a tag that you're
interested in. In this case, let's say
productivity. But you could do this for
nested tags, some tags, or just
specifying specific cards that you want
to chat to or compare. So talking to all
the content I saved under productivity,
I could ask
make me a routine to optimize my focus
and productivity and
enhance it using my
journals. So, I've been taking journals
in recall, and I'd love to combine the
hundreds of content on productivity that
I've been saving with my own personal
journals just so I can get a really
tailored protocol. So, here you can see
all of the contents. It's referenced.
It's got a mix of content I've been
saving myself like my journals, but also
all those productivity podcasts. I think
I uploaded over a 100 podcasts from Tim
Ferrris and Cal Newport and both
imported them using the bookmarks and in
a way it's like I'm having a
conversation with them and their
expertise and then enhancing it using my
own personal information. So even here
you can see it references particular
timestamps where things were mentioned.
It mentions treat focus time as on or
off with simple rules to respect these
boundaries. I can see that it's
referencing a Cal Newport YouTube video
and I can then skip
>> and you just have a simple set of rules
for how you treat focus work
>> to the exact point in the video where
that was mentioned. So I now have a
really detailed schedule that's combined
expert advice that I trust along with my
own personal journals. Now I can get
nuts with examples for how I use chat.
I've bulk imported podcasts from Echo
who's a spiritual leader and I feel like
I'm speaking to him when I need advice
on my ego and keeping myself in check. I
love speaking with my journals. I love
speaking with my recipes. When I have a
big dinner party and I have about 10
different recipes that I want to make, I
quickly use it to make a shopping list.
Do check out my use cases where I go a
lot deeper on this and we're working on
some docs that cover all the use cases
with chats.
Before we wrap up, I just want to spend
a little bit of time on some of the
foundations of Recall and that is the
knowledge graph which starts with
connections. So when you open up a piece
of content and you have a look at the
connections tab, what you're seeing are
keywords that have been automatically
extracted from your content and linked
together. So here you see the word
dopamine and the number 15. And that's
because dopamine has been mentioned in
15 other pieces of content that I've
saved within recall. Now, if you see
connections here that are not that
interesting to you and you actually want
to remove it, you can just hover over it
and unlink that connection or you can
create your own connections. Now,
there's two key ways to do that. The
first is you can just highlight a word.
So, let's say Alzheimer's and then click
the lightning bolt. This will then pull
up a short list to either let you create
an empty card, so create a blank card on
Alzheimer's, or link to existing cards,
or pull up a card from Wikipedia. So, in
this case, it's pulled up a Wikipedia
page on Alzheimer's and linked it to 12
other pieces of content that also
mention Alzheimer's.
If I also want to link to content that
isn't on Wikipedia, but is actually just
in my own knowledge base, I can do that
as well. So, this is a YouTube video on
sugar cravings. I might want to link it
to some of my recipes. So, for this, I'm
going to the forward slash sign, and
this pulled up a bit of a search where I
can then type in
my avocado chocolate mousse. And here I
have a mix of the avocado Wikipedia page
or my avocado chocolate mousse. So when
I open up avocado chocolate mousse, I
now have a backlink that takes me to
that original piece of content on
killing your sugar cravings.
These connections play quite an
important role in recall. In fact, it
forms the base of a relatively new
feature, which is augmented browsing. To
turn this on, you go to browser
extension settings. You click enable
augmented browsing. You can also turn on
the widget. They go quite nicely hand in
hand. And what happens is then as you're
browsing first you see this little
widget pop up and this then mentions the
number of connections I have on a given
page back to my knowledge base. So the
idea here was when you're saving so much
content into recall. How can you have it
instead of just sitting passively
resurface as you're browsing other
relevant information? And so here I have
45 connections back to my knowledge
base. I can see that these little
highlights pop up as I browse. So here I
can see the word nora periphery and I
might think I've seen this word
norareaphering before. Where have I seen
it? And I can see that it was mentioned
in this podcast that I had listened to
years ago. And when I click on it,
it takes me back to the exact place in
my knowledge base where Nora peripher
was mentioned. So I get a really nice
reminder even for 20 seconds. It's known
to increase nor peripherine by 200%. So
that's crazy. You know, I've forgotten
about cold bath and the impact of nor
peripherine and I've gone from browsing
an article to ending up back in my
knowledge base and making this
connection.
While that's really fun, you might see
some words that you're not that
interested in seeing again. So you could
hover over it and just click this little
eye to unlink it. And you can also add
particular sites that you don't want
augmented browsing showing on. All that
said, augmented browsing is local first.
So as you're browsing and have augmented
browsing turned on, nothing leaves your
device.
The last part to mention on connections
is that visual representation. So you
may have gotten a bit more curious on
that graph view and this really shows
you how your cards are linking together
in a more visual format. So here I can
see this podcast mentions information. I
can then click that plus sign and it
then opens up into all the other content
that I have that mentions inflammation
and could link me to a completely
separate topic on longevity molecules.
This is now the single card graph view,
but you can also see a graph view of all
all the content in your knowledge base.
I have over 3,000 pieces of content. So,
this really looks insane. It's
unmanageable. And so I really come in
and filter it. So if I'm doing a bit
more work on sleep, I might want to
click into my sleep graph view. This is
a lot more manageable. So I can actually
come in and zoom into particular
connections that might be interesting to
explore more. That said, I think there's
a lot more that we can do on our graph
view to bring a lot more utility and
management to it.
The last feature I'll leave you with,
which also pertains to the whole
knowledge base, is the recall review.
Now, you would have seen that quiz we
created earlier. And what it does is it
takes a card that you've generated a
quiz on, shuffles it up, and creates
this personalized learning schedule for
you. So, the more that you get answers
incorrect, the more you keep seeing that
answer, the more you get answers
correct, the less you'll see it. And so
it really uses these two scientific
techniques of active recall and space
repetition to create this schedule for
you to help you offset your forgetting
curve. Just a personal note, I got off
social media a few years ago and
I still found that I had this itch to
want to do something on my phone. And I
found that actually coming into recall
and navigating to some of the content
that I'm interested in and running a
little recall review was just a great
way to use my time and actually ensure
that the content that I was trying to
learn, I actually was grasping and
putting my knowledge to the test. Do
note that we have quite a lot of
customization available within your
knowledge base. So head over to your
settings where you can change to a light
theme. Uh you can switch your default
action, change your languages. Have a
little bit of fun playing around with
these settings. I will leave you at
that. I honestly have transformed the
way I decide to spend my time with
content. Transform the peace of mind I
have with where I save precious
information that I care about. And I
have to say I have been having so much
fun with our chat with knowledgebased
feature really extracting value from all
the things I've been saving over the
years and uncovering insights that I
truly would have missed without recall.
Do give us a go. We would love your
feedback. We're actively building and
iterating on recall and you our users is
what really helps us shape that. So
thank you for watching this and would
love to hear from you. Cheers.
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