I built BibleTrace as a way to organize thoughts while studying the Bible.
Most tools focus on reading or consuming content. This is different cause it’s a workspace where you create nodes (people, places, concepts, events) and connect them as you read, forming a personal knowledge graph over time.
The goal is not to provide answers or commentary, but to help your own understanding accumulate instead of resetting each time you study.
Curious to hear:
- whether the graph approach feels useful
- where the UX is confusing
- and if this kind of tool fits into how you already study or think
vandervs•1h ago
Most tools focus on reading or consuming content. This is different cause it’s a workspace where you create nodes (people, places, concepts, events) and connect them as you read, forming a personal knowledge graph over time.
The goal is not to provide answers or commentary, but to help your own understanding accumulate instead of resetting each time you study.
Curious to hear:
- whether the graph approach feels useful - where the UX is confusing - and if this kind of tool fits into how you already study or think