Disclosure: I contribute to the OpenNomos ecosystem where Paper List is listed.
I read about 30 research papers a month. Not because I'm an academic—I'm a product person who needs to stay on top of what's happening in AI, developer tools, and Web3.
The problem wasn't reading the papers. It was remembering them.
The "Where Did I Read That?" Problem
Three months ago, I was writing a product analysis and needed to reference a specific finding from a paper I'd read in January. I spent 45 minutes searching:
- Browser history: too many entries, no context
- Zotero: I'd stopped using it because the interface felt like filing taxes
- Notion: I had notes, but buried three levels deep
- Slack DMs: I'd sent a summary to a colleague, but scrolling back through three months of messages was hopeless
I found the paper eventually. But that 45 minutes felt like it went straight into a black hole.
What I Actually Needed
I didn't need a full academic reference manager. I needed:
- Quick capture — save a paper in under 10 seconds
- Lightweight annotation — 2-3 bullet points, not a literature review
- Search that works — find by keyword, topic, or date
- Progress tracking — know what I've read, what's in my queue
Most tools in this space are built for academics writing theses. I just wanted something that felt like a to-do list for my reading brain.
Enter Paper List
Paper List is a personal paper engine. The tagline is "Paper list for paper engine" — and it delivers on that.
Here's my current workflow:
- Find a paper → Save to Paper List with the URL
- Read → Highlight key sections
- Annotate → 3-sentence summary: what problem, how solved, what limitations
- Tag → Categorize by topic (ML, devtools, crypto, etc.)
- Revisit → Search by tag or keyword when I need to reference something
The whole process takes less than two minutes per paper. And when I need to find something later, I just search.
Why "Personal Paper Engine" Matters
The phrase "paper engine" isn't just marketing. It captures something important:
A paper engine is to research what a search engine is to the web. It doesn't just store—it retrieves.
Zotero and Mendeley store papers. They're archives. Paper List is designed for retrieval first. The reading, annotating, and organizing all serve one purpose: finding what you need, when you need it.
Three Months In
I've tracked about 90 papers since I started using it. The real ROI isn't the tool itself—it's the mental model it creates.
When you know you can find anything in 30 seconds, you stop hoarding. You read with more focus because you're not worried about forgetting. You take better notes because you know they'll be retrievable.
What's Still Missing
No tool is perfect. Here's what I wish Paper List had:
- Collaboration: sharing reading lists with teammates
- Integration: browser extension for one-click save
- Export: markdown or JSON export for backup
But for a personal reading workflow, it covers 80% of what I need. And I'll take 80% coverage with 10-second setup over 100% coverage with 2-hour setup any day.
If you read papers regularly and have a system that works, I'd love to hear about it. What's your workflow?
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