12 comments

  • redm 14 hours ago
    This is pretty cool!

    What's holding me back from AI repos and agents isn't running it locally though. Its the lack of granular control. I'm not even sure what I want. I certainly don't want to approve every request, but the idea of large amounts of personal data being accessible, unchecked, to an AI is concerning.

    I think perhaps an agent that focuses just on security, that learns about your personal preferences, is what might be needed.

    • kenforthewin 13 hours ago
      Thanks for taking a look!

      Agreed regarding the privacy/security hesitations. Running the models locally with ollama is an option, but of course there's the hardware requirements and limitations of open source models to contend with. ultimately it's a balance between privacy and ease of use, and I'm not sure that there's a good one-size-fits-all for that balance.

    • tedmiston 7 hours ago
      is your idea of granular control (roughly) a group of agents in separate containers writing back to their own designated store each sufficient, or more control than that?
  • jsmo 3 hours ago
    This looks pretty neat! Thanks for sharing ^_^

    I saw sqlite-vec for semantic search so I assume notes are stored in sqlite.

    - What considerations did you have for the storage layer?

    - Also does storage on disk increase linearly as notes/atoms grow?

  • Notjoanbaez 5 hours ago
    Nice ! Congratulations.

    Not 100% sure what are the ingestions methods available ? Browser extension clipper and RSS are two. I guess I can manually create a node/atom ? Can it scan a local folder for markdown notes ? Or ocr some pdf -> markdown/frontmatter sidecar files -> atomic node ? That would be the dream.

  • aavci 8 hours ago
    Does anybody mind explaining how the web of articles in the first image helps the writer?
    • kenforthewin 7 hours ago
      The honest answer is it doesn't help a ton, at least not in its current form. It's fun to look at, and occasionally I'll see some interesting semantic connections between articles - but by far the more useful tools here are the wiki generation, auto-tagging, and chat/MCP features. The graph view definitely needs more love - if anyone has thoughts on how to make it more useful, I'd love to hear them.
      • eucyclos 6 hours ago
        My first thought is that this would be a great place to find new topics of interest at the "overlap" regions.
  • visarga 6 hours ago
    I did something similar, markdown and code agents for memory, multiple feeds for intake, also my own browsing and claude cli messages get indexed.
  • andreygrehov 13 hours ago
    Great work, but your macOS build cannot be opened. You need to sign the app through Apple Developer Program.
    • kenforthewin 13 hours ago
      Thanks! The project is still early stages, haven't had a chance to get the app signing set up - right now the easiest way to get started is using the web interface via docker compose.
    • actionfromafar 13 hours ago
      System Settings > Privacy & Security, scroll down to the "Security" section, and click Open Anyway
  • pwchiefy 9 hours ago
    I think tools like this will get really popular once more non-technical users get comfortable with CLI-based agentic tools. What's your go-to agent harness when using this? Will check it out!
  • ukuina 14 hours ago
    Seems like a LogSeq/Roam/Obsidian alternative?
    • kenforthewin 13 hours ago
      For sure. The idea here (or at least how I've been using it) is to use Atomic as catchall place to put personal notes, interesting articles, research ideas .. pretty much anything, and Atomic will handle the categorization and knowledge synthesis. For example, I have a knowledge base that uses RSS to sync top Hacker News articles and I'll occasionally generate new wiki-style articles which summarize and synthesize the articles based on top-level categories (AI, hardware, philosophy, you name it).
  • leontloveless 15 hours ago
    [dead]
  • websitedfan 13 hours ago
    [dead]
  • maurice-nomad 10 hours ago
    looks fine
  • bamwor 7 hours ago
    Clean approach to connecting knowledge semantically. The self-hosted angle is smart — data ownership matters especially for personal knowledge. How are you handling the semantic matching under the hood?