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Knowledge Graph

The knowledge graph helps you see relationships between saved items instead of treating each article as an isolated note.

What it is for

Use the graph when you want to answer questions like:

  • which items are about the same topic
  • where viewpoints support or contradict each other
  • which people, organizations, or themes keep appearing
  • how a topic evolves over time

Two ways to use it

Graph view

The main graph view is best for scanning the overall network:

  • node size reflects the importance or quality of an item
  • lines show that two items are related
  • line strength reflects how strong that relationship is

Explore view

The explore view is better when you want a guided path through the graph.

It is useful for:

  • deep dives on one theme
  • tracing conflict or agreement across sources
  • following a time-based sequence
  • centering exploration on entities or topics

How to read the graph

The exact data behind the graph can evolve, but the product intent is stable:

  • related items should be easy to spot
  • important items should stand out visually
  • position and role should help you decide what to read next

Best time to use it

The graph becomes more useful after you already have a meaningful library.

It is most helpful when:

  • you saved several items on one topic
  • you want synthesis, not just retrieval
  • you are trying to decide what is primary source material versus commentary

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