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linko-study.bsky.social
Linko
@linko-study.bsky.social
Building an AI-powered knowledge tree for lifelong learners who value depth over speed | Record → Connect → Understand
That moment when a book you're reading suddenly connects to something you read last year—and you actually remember because you wrote it down.

That's not luck. That's what happens when your notes can find each other.

linko.study
February 11, 2026 at 9:53 PM
Auto-labeling alone is not enough. Too many labels without a structure are just better chaos.

That's why Linko does both: auto-labels everything and connects them with a structure.

So your knowledge compounds, not just accumulates.

linko.study
A Knowledge Tree That Builds Itself
Save what you read. Write what you think. Watch your knowledge connect and grow automatically.
linko.study
January 29, 2026 at 10:14 PM
Collecting information faster than you can integrate it creates mess.

Linko exists to close that gap — turning fragmented learning into a connected Knowledge Tree that grows over time, revealing patterns and connections you couldn't realize on your own.

linko.study
January 22, 2026 at 10:20 PM
Forgetting is part of learning.

The issue isn't that you forget—it's that most systems treat it as loss.

Linko brings ideas back when they matter: through related thinking, and as questions that make you reconsider what you knew.

linko.study
January 20, 2026 at 7:50 PM
Most notes get forgotten over time.
But a note isn't meant to stay static—it's a seed.
Seeds need soil to grow. Your thinking is that soil.

Linko surfaces old notes when they're relevant again.
It connects them to new ideas.
It generates questions that help you think deeper.

linko.study
January 15, 2026 at 10:11 PM
Knowledge is organized by what you understand, not where it came from.

When notes from different books, articles, and videos converge around a topic, that's when scattered ideas start becoming your own coherent understanding of how the world works.

linko.study
January 14, 2026 at 7:00 PM