A mymind alternative
where you stay in control.
mymind asks you to save everything and trust its AI to find it later. Kelu makes the opposite bet: you tag what you save, so search is predictable — and the same library is on your iPhone, your Mac, and the web, free for your first 2,500 items.
Same privacy, different trust.
Both apps are private libraries for the things you save — no feed, no followers, no ads. The difference is who does the organizing. mymind hands it all to AI and hopes its categories match yours. Kelu gives you tags, so the name in your head is the name in the app, on every device you own.
mymind vs Kelu, honestly
No straw men. Here's where each app is genuinely stronger, so you can pick the one that matches how you actually work.
What you gain by organizing it yourself
Search you can predict
When you tagged something "navbar inspo," typing that finds it — every time. No hoping the AI filed your screenshot under the category you'd have picked.
Free enough to actually live in
mymind's trial is two weeks. Kelu's first 2,500 items are free, so you can move a real collection over and use it for months before deciding to pay.
Tags travel with you
Tag a reference on your Mac, search for it on your phone in line at the coffee shop. One library, identical on iPhone, Mac, and the web.
A few seconds now, instant later
Tagging at save time costs almost nothing — Kelu suggests as you type. What it buys is never scrolling through a pile looking for something you know is there.
When to stay with mymind
- You save more than images. mymind keeps articles, notes, products, and quotes side by side with pictures. Kelu is focused on images, screenshots, and visual references.
- You genuinely never want to organize. If even a two-second tag feels like friction, mymind's save-and-forget flow is the most frictionless capture there is.
- You're on Android. mymind has an Android app; Kelu is currently iPhone, Mac, and web.
We'd rather you pick the right tool than the loudest one. If that's mymind, it's a genuinely lovely app.
mymind vs Kelu — common questions
Is Kelu a good mymind alternative?
If you love the idea of saving without ever organizing, mymind's AI-first approach is genuinely pleasant. If you've ever searched mymind for something you know is in there and couldn't surface it, Kelu is the better fit — you tag items yourself, so finding them is predictable, and the same tagged library is on your iPhone, your Mac, and the web.
Does mymind have folders or tags?
mymind's whole philosophy is that you shouldn't need them — its pitch is that you don't have to file, label, or even tag what you save; AI categorizes everything automatically. Kelu takes the opposite view: tags you choose are the backbone of the library, so the structure in your head is the structure in the app.
Is mymind free?
Not really. There's a free trial and a small storage-limited guest plan, but ongoing use means a subscription: $4.99/month for the Bookmarker plan (which leaves out the AI features that are mymind's whole point), $7.99/month for Student of Life, or $12.99/month for Mastermind. Kelu is free for your first 2,500 items, which is enough to live in it for months before paying anything.
Can I move my mymind saves into Kelu?
mymind lets you export your saved content, so you're not locked in. There's no one-click importer, but for images and screenshots the move is simple: export from mymind, add them to Kelu, and tag them as they come in — most people find re-tagging a collection takes one evening and makes it more findable than it ever was.
What's the real difference between AI organization and tags?
AI organization is effortless until it isn't: when the model's idea of a category doesn't match yours, the item is effectively lost. Tags cost a few seconds at save time and pay it back every search — you named it, so you know what to type. Kelu bets on the second model; mymind bets on the first.
Is Kelu private like mymind?
Yes. Both apps are private libraries — no public profiles, no feed, no ads, nobody browsing your saves. Where they differ is control and price, not privacy.
Try the library that remembers your names for things.
Bring your references over, tag them once, and reach them from any device. Free for your first 2,500 items.