Maybe you remember seeing an article you wanted to read while you were at the airport, but didn’t think to save - search for “LAX” and there are all the things you did or looked at while you were there. Click on any of them and it takes you straight there. In that case maybe it would be the tickets you were emailed, then nearby, the plans you made over email with friends to get there, the Facebook invite you made, the articles you were reading about the team, your fantasy football page. The result is that a vague search, say “Seahawks game,” will instantly produce all the data related to it, regardless of what silo it happens to be in, and presented with the most relevant stuff first.
#DELETE ATLAS RECALL WINDOWS#
It knows when you looked at them, what order you did so in, what other windows and apps you had open at the same time, where you were when you accessed it, who it was shared with before, and tons of other metadata. Not only does it keep track of all those items and their contents, but it knows the context surrounding them.
Ritter, formerly of Napster, among other companies, explained the genesis of the company and product.
I met with Atlas Informatics CEO Jordan Ritter and VP of marketing Travis Murdock at their office in Seattle ahead of the launch. Atlas Recall aims to fix that with “one search to rule them all,” indexing everything you see and do on all your devices, but organizing it in very human fashion. So why is it so hard to find stuff on them? Probably because our own memories don’t work the same way.