Rewind
Rewind is an AI “second brain” that continuously records what you see, say, and hear on your devices so you can search, summarize, and ask questions about your past digital activity. It focuses on private, local-first storage and retrieval rather than generic web search or cloud note-taking. Rewind is a personalized AI memory tool for macOS and iOS that captures your screen, audio, meetings, Safari reading, screenshots, and voice notes, then makes them searchable with natural language and AI summaries.
Core features
Continuous capture of screen and audio to index everything you have seen, said, or heard, with timeline-style rewind.
Natural-language search across past apps, web pages, meetings, screenshots, and transcripts.
Meeting recording, transcription, and automatic action-oriented summaries.
Ask Rewind-style Q&A that lets you query your own past activity (“What did the client say about budget last week?”).
Mobile “personal AI in your pocket” for Safari history, screenshots, and in‑person audio recordings on iPhone.
Key tools it offers
Timeline & rewind player: Visual timeline of your day to replay on-screen activity and audio for any moment.
Meeting assistant: Auto-capture and summarize calls, extract action items, and draft follow‑up emails or CRM notes.
Ask Rewind / AI chat: Chat interface to ask questions about your own captured data and get grounded answers with citations and links back to moments in time.
Mobile capture app: iOS app that records Safari reading, screenshots, and in‑person conversations so your “second brain” follows you away from the Mac.
Privacy controls & exclusions: Settings to pause recording, exclude apps or private windows, and keep everything encrypted and local unless minimal text is needed for LLM features.
Benefits and use cases
For executives & operators: Recover key decisions, promises, and context from past calls, emails, and docs without manual note-taking.
For teams in sales, product, and engineering: Auto-summarize customer calls, feature discussions, and sprint reviews, then search them later.
For knowledge workers generally: Treat your activity as a searchable knowledge base, reducing time spent hunting through apps and tabs.