About Reway
Reway was built to make saving useful things feel calm again.
The problem
Most of us save links faster than we can return to them. Bookmarks become a long list, scattered across browsers, chats, and notes. The cost shows up later when you need to find a source, remember why you saved it, or reuse a reference in a new project.
I wanted a place where saved items stay readable and searchable, with enough structure to make the library useful without turning saving into a chore.
The philosophy
Reway is designed around a few simple ideas.
- Saving should be quick, and organizing should be optional.
- Context matters. A saved item should keep its title, summary, and the parts you care about.
- Search should work the way you think, even when you do not remember the exact words.
- The interface should stay quiet. The library is the product.
What Reway does
Reway helps you capture links and group them into a personal library. When you save something, it can extract helpful metadata so you can skim later and find it again. The browser extension is there to reduce friction, so saving does not depend on where you are working.
The goal is simple: turn scattered links into a library you can trust.