Stoforno is like an index — a quiet place on a shelf.
A place you reach for without thinking, because you know what you’re looking for will be there.
In a world where we save everything and find almost nothing, Stoforno restores order.
It isn’t another app, feed, or inbox.
It is a calm, stable point of reference.
Stoforno does not store copies of information.
It does not keep articles, images, or documents.
It stores the path to them — the place where you left them.
It is not an archive. It is a map.
Simple, light, and always within reach.
Stoforno is built slowly, deliberately, without rush.
The way things are built when they’re meant to last.
Stoforno sounds like a word that could mean: I am like an oven.
Not the kind that stands in the center of attention, but the kind that works quietly in the background — holding warmth, rhythm, and space where things can mature.
An oven doesn’t create anything by itself. It is a place where ingredients meet a recipe, and patience becomes part of the process.
It doesn’t hurry. It doesn’t push. It allows what is valuable to form in its own time.
Stoforno works the same way.
It is a stage, not just a name — a moment when chaos begins to take shape.
Like storming → forming → performing: first tension, then ordering, finally action.
The name was available exactly when it was needed — as if it had been waiting for the vision that would give it meaning.
The MVP is intentionally small.
Saving links. Finding links. Organizing links.
No AI. No automation. No “magic”.
AI may come later — in the full application, as part of a premium tier — but only where it truly reduces noise.
Stoforno must first be clean, predictable, human.
What problem does Stoforno solve?
That saved things disappear. Not because we lose them — but because we don’t have one natural place to return to.
How is it different from browser bookmarks?
Bookmarks are great for things you visit daily. They are terrible for everything you save “for later”.
Will there be AI?
Not in the MVP. Possibly later, in the full app, as part of a premium tier.
Will there be a mobile app?
Yes — but not immediately. First web, then mobile web, then native apps.
What is the business model?
A free tier for most people. A paid tier for power users. No ads. No selling of data.
How can I help shape the product?
Your workflows, frustrations, and examples of “this is where I always lose links” are the most valuable input.
What comes after the MVP?
Browser extensions. Better search. Thematic views. Light collaboration. AI as support — not as noise.