Semantic Search

Search by meaning, not the name you forgot.

Find the right documents even when you cannot remember the title, folder, or exact words. ThinkForge searches by meaning and exact match, then uses Cluster Graph to show the context around the result.

Search and memory feature infographic
No AI used

Find what you remember, then recover the context

Semantic search Exact match Cluster Graph Project Navigator Power Strip Tools

Meaning And Match

Search the way you actually remember things.

Most search tools expect you to remember the right name. That is not how work happens.

You remember the idea. You remember the rough topic. You remember it was tied to a draft, a chat, a spec, or something you were working on last week.

ThinkForge handles both ends of that. If you remember the exact phrase or filename, keyword search still works. If you only remember what the document was about, semantic search finds it anyway. Search for "login problems" and ThinkForge can surface notes about authentication, account access, or sign-in issues, even if those exact words never appear.

You do not have to organize perfectly before search becomes useful. You can tighten the view later with file type, folder, date, or tags once the right area is on screen.

Cluster Graph

Search finds the document. Cluster Graph finds the context.

This is where ThinkForge stops looking like other search tools.

A flat list can show what matched. Cluster Graph shows what belongs around it.

Open a result in Cluster Graph and you see the nearby documents: related notes, connected chats, specs, drafts, source material. Instead of getting back an isolated file, you see why it matters and what else belongs with it.

Select a document and the graph focuses on its strongest connections. Unrelated material fades back. The context comes forward.

That is the difference between finding a file and finding your place again.

Act On Results

Turn the result into something you can use.

Finding the document is the start, not the end.

From search or Cluster Graph, you can open documents, copy a connected group, add the useful pieces to a workspace, or hand the set to a tool. Project knowledge is almost never stored in one perfect file. It is spread across notes, chats, specs, drafts, and captures. ThinkForge helps you collect the right set instead of opening files one at a time.

Tools can pick up from there. Some use AI when the task needs interpretation. Many do not need AI at all: they just run the steps. Collect these files. Apply this tag. Export this set. Move matching documents. Build a report. The point is that tools sit close to the work, not buried in another window.

Where You Work

Search from where you are.

ThinkForge search does not live in one place.

Use it inside Project Navigator when you are already in the project. Use Document Graph when you want the visual map. Use Power Strip when you need to find or open something without leaving the app you are working in.

Search is part of the work environment, not a separate destination you have to switch to.

You remember where things live, even when you forget what they are called.

ThinkForge is built around that. Search by what you remember. See what surrounds the result. Pull the related pieces together. Keep working.

Your project finally has a place, and you can find your way back to it.