But most of those systems are built on a flawed idea: that more equals better . More followers. More bookmarks. More likes.
Because a link without context is just a path to nowhere. A link with context? That’s a launchpad. r-link
How r-link is quietly reshaping the way we discover, share, and grow — one connection at a time. We live in an age of noise. Endless tabs, unread messages, and notifications that stack faster than we can swipe them away. But here’s the paradox: we’ve never been more connected — yet felt less linked to what actually matters. But most of those systems are built on
r-link was built to kill invisible links for good. In plain English: You drop a resource, a question, or an introduction into r-link. Our system doesn’t just store it — it maps it. Who touched it. What it relates to. Where it might go next. More likes
Then, when you’re searching for something — an expert on microplastics, a case study from 2022, a design template that doesn’t look like every other one — r-link surfaces what you actually forgot you had.
It’s like giving your professional memory superpowers. One of our early users, a product manager at a mid-sized fintech company, put it this way: “I spent two weeks looking for a competitor analysis my teammate had shared in a random email thread. I literally cried when r-link found it in three seconds. Three. Seconds.” That’s not magic. That’s just what happens when links stop being lifeless URLs and start being relational . The Future Is Relational We’re not building a tool for hoarding links. We’re building a tool for activating them.