Ian Ph. UX designer

Here!

Me

Bookmarks

Playground

Writing

Project

GenVita - Generali

Capella GenAI

UOB AI-Pitch

Trading Agent AI

OSL Trading

TCB Design system

Omanadala

Online

ian.ph693@gmail.com

Bookmarks

Improve your Digital Chaos

fabric.io

Bring order to Your Photo Library

imagemate.app

Turn curiosity into adventure

rabbithole.chat

Clears Your Calendar Fog

pepperai.app

AI Journaling Assistant

Sparky App Store

Get News in a Nutshell

epigram.news

Headlines in 5 Minutes

particle.news

Memory Time Machine

brainsave.ai

AI wellness buddy

Doti App Store

Pocket Nutritionist 

calai.app

#artificial intelligence

RabbitHole

🐇 The AI Explorer That Turns Curiosity into Adventure

Visit

Ever find yourself half-listening to a documentary, ask a question, and then lose track of your train of thought? I ended up wandering across Wikipedia, rabbit-hole style—until I found RabbitHole, the AI that actually follows where your mind wanders (and makes it fascinating).

Discovered RabbitHole, an AI-powered exploration canvas that branches conversations across topics in a nonlinear, mind-map style—much like chatting with a brilliant friend who never says “that’s off-topic.”

  1. Thoughtful, branching exploration

Unlike rigid search results, RabbitHole lets you follow curiosity through connected nodes, branching across topics in an intuitive, visual way.

  1. Infinite canvas for idea mapping

Maintain depth and context by keeping multiple AI-driven threads alive in a visual canvas, so you never lose your place.

  1. Mix and match media and models

You can embed PDFs, YouTube videos, and even switch between AI models mid-conversation—keeping exploration fresh and grounded 

🤔 My Take / POV

I used to jot down random questions during videos and end up in endless tabs—but now RabbitHole captures that curiosity in real-time. It’s like whenever my brain throws a “what about…,” RabbitHole catches it and runs with me. Learning feels more playful, more connected—and way more fun.

💡 What I Wish It Had

Would love a “memory bookmark” feature — so you can mark a node or conversation path to revisit later, like a trail of breadcrumbs through your curiosity journey. That would help me come back to what sparked me most, without losing those thought threads.