Vurlo fixes that.
Save on your laptop with intent — why you saved it and when you want to revisit. Your phone reminds you at exactly that moment. The link comes back when it matters, not buried in a folder you'll never open.
What resurfacing feels like
VURLO · NOW
Saved 8 days ago
"researching freelance accountants for Q3" — still relevant?
Not a random reminder. Your exact reason for saving, delivered at the right moment. Two taps to close the loop.
Save with intent
When you save, tell Vurlo why. A quick note or intent chip. Five seconds. Changes everything about what happens next.
Vurlo remembers
Your decay clock starts. Links don't pile up forgotten — they live with a purpose and a timer, waiting for the right moment.
Your phone resurfaces it
At the interval you chose, your phone sends a notification: "You saved this 8 days ago — because you were researching suppliers. Still relevant?" Two taps closes the loop.
I make bookmarks and eventually never find them resurfacing.
— The question that started Vurlo, from a curious kid
One evening, a school-going child noticed something most adults had quietly accepted: bookmarks pile up, but rarely resurface when you need them. You save something with every intention of returning — and then life moves on, the link gets buried, and the moment passes. The observation was obvious. Nobody had properly fixed it. So we built Vurlo.
Vurlo is completely free while we're in beta. We're focused on getting the experience right. Early beta users will hear first — and get the best deal.
Join the beta and shape what Vurlo becomes — including how it's priced.
Request beta accessStop saving things you'll never find again. Start saving with intent. Vurlo brings them back when you need them.
Add to Chrome — it's freeNo account needed to start. Free forever.
¹ Bergman, O., Whittaker, S., & Schooler, J. (2021). Out of sight and out of mind: Bookmarks are created but not used. Journal of Information Science. Users accessed fewer than 10% of their saved bookmarks when retrieving URLs.