Semantic feeds
Save searches like "AI visibility for B2B SaaS" or "enterprise onboarding friction" and get stories that match the meaning.
Turn plain-language research angles into live feeds. curaft helps content, product, and GTM teams scan useful stories, track market language, and keep the source material worth returning to.
Each feed is a reusable semantic search for a market, customer problem, competitor angle, or content brief. Give curaft the intent once, then keep scanning fresh stories that match the work.
Save searches like "AI visibility for B2B SaaS" or "enterprise onboarding friction" and get stories that match the meaning.
Scan new stories across the saved feeds that matter to your work, without rebuilding the same search every day.
Use a smaller daily pass when you need a quick sense of what changed before a planning session or writing block.
Keep articles worth citing, briefing, or reading later. Saves stay in your browser, so there is no account gate.
Search for a problem, audience, industry, workflow, or positioning angle in the same words you would use in a brief.
Open it, create a few feeds, and read. Preferences live locally while the product stays easy to try.
Start with the words you already use in briefs and planning docs. curaft turns them into a clean feed you can scan, save, and revisit.
Pick presets or create natural-language feeds for a market, audience, problem, or competitor angle.
curaft looks for stories that match the meaning of your feeds, not only the exact wording.
Build a small reference shelf for content briefs, market notes, newsletters, and later reading.
Ask for what you need the way you would brief a teammate. curaft uses semantic search to find matching stories even when the headline uses different words.
Use phrases like "AI visibility for B2B SaaS" or "customer onboarding friction" and keep them as reusable feeds.
Semantic search can surface useful stories that exact keyword matching would miss.
Save references for content briefs, product research, newsletters, and internal notes.
curaft is for teams that need market context before writing briefs, planning campaigns, shaping positioning, or deciding what deserves attention.
Find source material, timely examples, and competing angles before deciding what to write, update, or publish.
Track buyer language, category movement, competitor narratives, and proof points that make messaging sharper.
Follow customer problems, market movement, and useful industry coverage without building a full research process.
Start in the app, subscribe through RSS, embed a live feed on a resource page, or call the API from an internal tool. The same semantic search layer supports each surface.
Save semantic searches and scan them as individual feeds or one combined view.
Publish a feed on another page with configurable cards, rows, result counts, and refresh behavior.
Subscribe to semantic search feeds from readers and automation tools that already understand RSS.
Request semantic content results from your own product, internal tools, or lightweight workflows.
Feed readers, read-it-later apps, bookmark managers, social magazines, and alerts all solve different jobs. curaft is for semantic feeds, story briefs, and saving the few reads worth keeping.
RSS and intelligence feeds
Feedly is stronger when you want a source-managed RSS and intelligence workspace. curaft is lighter when you want semantic discovery feeds, readable briefs, and a saved list without maintaining sources.
View comparisonPower RSS reader
Inoreader is stronger when you want a configurable RSS reader with feeds, rules, alerts, newsletters, and power-user controls. curaft is better when you want less configuration and semantic feed scanning.
View comparisonRead-it-later and reading library
Readwise Reader is stronger as a long-term reading library for articles, newsletters, PDFs, EPUBs, videos, and highlights. curaft is better before that, when the job is finding which stories are worth saving at all.
View comparisonBookmark manager
Raindrop.io is stronger when your main job is organizing bookmarks into collections, tags, and highlights. curaft is better when you need to discover useful reads before deciding what deserves a bookmark.
View comparisonSocial magazine discovery
Flipboard is stronger when you want a social magazine-style discovery experience. curaft is better when you want a quieter, work-focused reading surface for semantic feeds, story briefs, and saved references.
View comparisonEmail alerts
Google Alerts is stronger when you want email notifications for specific search terms. curaft is better when you want an app surface for browsing semantic feeds, reading story briefs, and saving useful items.
View comparisonFeedly
RSS and intelligence feeds
Strongest fit Teams and power users who want to follow known sources, build AI feeds, and organize ongoing monitoring workflows.
curaft is better when Readers who want useful stories from semantic feeds, with less source setup and a simpler save/read loop.
Watch out for If your workflow depends on exact RSS source control, Feedly is the more mature fit.
Inoreader
Power RSS reader
Strongest fit RSS power users who want detailed control over sources, feeds, filters, newsletters, and automation.
curaft is better when People who want current stories from plain-language searches without building a complete RSS system first.
Watch out for If rules, filters, and feed-level control are core to your process, Inoreader is built for that.
Readwise Reader
Read-it-later and reading library
Strongest fit People who want a serious personal reading system with highlights, notes, and many document types.
curaft is better when People who want a fast semantic feed and story brief before committing anything to a reading library.
Watch out for If highlighting, annotation, and long-term knowledge review are the core job, Reader is a better fit.
Raindrop.io
Bookmark manager
Strongest fit People who already have links to organize and want a polished bookmark manager.
curaft is better when People who need a better way to find and triage links before saving them.
Watch out for If your pain is bookmark organization rather than discovery, Raindrop.io is more directly aligned.
Social magazine discovery
Strongest fit Readers who enjoy following interests, magazines, people, and social discovery surfaces.
curaft is better when People doing research, planning, or content work who want fewer distractions and more direct context.
Watch out for If you want a magazine-like social reading experience, Flipboard is closer to that habit.
Google Alerts
Email alerts
Strongest fit Simple email monitoring for names, phrases, companies, or narrow queries.
curaft is better when People who want a reading workspace rather than another alert email in the inbox.
Watch out for If email delivery is the whole requirement, Google Alerts may be enough.
Comparison notes are based on publicly described product capabilities. Plan limits and packaging can change.
Small content, product marketing, GTM, and founder-led teams that need useful source material before they brief, publish, position, or plan.
Start with one plain-language search, save the useful feeds, and keep the references worth returning to. No sales call, no setup project.