Hi HN!
We got frustrated with the fragmented experience of exploring & creating across our file manager, the web and document apps. Lots of manual searching, opening windows & tabs, scrolling, and ultimately copying & pasting into a document editor.
Surf is a desktop app meant for simultaneous research and thinking to minimize the grunt work. It’s made of two parts:
1) A multi-media library where you can save and organize files and webpages into collections called Notebooks.
2) A LLM-powered smart document which you can auto-generate using the context from any stored page, tab or entire notebook. This document contains deep links back to the source material — like a page of a PDF or timestamp in a YouTube video. Unlike Deep Research products (or NotebookLMs chat) the entire thing is editable. The user also stays in the loop.
With a technology like AI, context / data is proving to be king. We think it should stay under the user’s control, with minimal lock in: where you can own & export, and plug & play with different models. That’s why Surf is:
- Open Source on GitHub
- Open (& Local Data): the data saved in Surf is stored on your local machine in open and accessible formats and mostly works offline.
- Open Model Choice: you can choose which models you use with Surf, and can add custom & Local LLMs
Early users include students & researchers who are learning and doing thematic research using Surf.
Github repo: https://github.com/deta/surf/
Website: https://deta.surf/
They didn't pivot, they completely reinvented themselves. Twice.
I loved their first cloud offering, which they sadly abandoned.
Then they launched Space, which was kinda cool, but mostly weird and raised the question "why?". Also cancelled.
Surf looks mostly cool, although I also don't quite understand it. It seems like Notion with a different twist on AI. Not sure. Since I'm fairly happy with my Obsidian + Codex setup, I'll pass for now. The good news is, this one's open source!
I'd love to know how they're financing all of this. They have been around for years and users never even had the option to drop money in their lap. Now they're trying open source. Wild ride.
All the best!
PS: I would have paid for deta cloud Pro ;)
reply