Apache Solr
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Liminary is an AI-native knowledge platform built for consultants, fractional strategists, and small professional services firms.
It captures content from anywhere you work โ articles, PDFs, YouTube videos, AI chat conversations, emails โ through a Chrome extension and web app. Instead of just storing what you save, Liminary's AI automatically surfaces the right knowledge when you need it, without you having to search. It synthesizes insights across everything you've collected, fact-checks claims against your sources, detects gaps in your research, and helps you create client deliverables grounded in what you actually know. Use Claude, Gemini, ChatGPT is the same brainstorming session all from one place in Liminary.
If you've ever lost a key stat you know you read somewhere, scrambled to pull together supporting evidence for a recommendation, or wasted hours re-finding research across scattered tabs and tools, Liminary solves that. Save anything.
Your knowledge finds you when you need it.
Apache Solr
LiminaryApache Solr is recommended for organizations that need to implement powerful search capabilities, especially those managing large, complex datasets. It is ideal for businesses that require full-text search features, e-commerce sites, content management systems, and big data applications that demand high query performance and scalability.
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Liminary's answer:
Liminary is the only tool that covers save, organize, recall, and create in one AI-native workflow. Most tools handle one piece: bookmark managers save links, note apps organize, AI chatbots generate. But none of them connect your actual saved research to what you produce. Liminary does. It ingests anything (articles, PDFs, videos, AI conversations), then proactively surfaces the right knowledge when you need it, without you searching. It also fact-checks your outputs against your sources and flags gaps in your research, something no other tool in this space does.
Liminary's answer:
If you use Feedly or similar tools to monitor industry trends, you can read but not synthesize or create from what you save. If you use Guru or Glean, you get knowledge retrieval for teams, but it's built for internal company knowledge, not the external research consultants gather for client work. If you use ChatGPT or Claude alone, you get generation but no access to your own saved research, which means hallucinations and no source citations. Liminary connects all of that: capture from anywhere, AI recall with 4x better accuracy than ChatGPT + Google Drive, and creation tools that let you go from research to deliverable without leaving the product.
Liminary's answer:
Independent consultants, fractional strategists, and small professional services firms (1 to 5 people) who bill for their perspective. These are professionals who synthesize large volumes of research into client deliverables like strategy decks, positioning docs, market analyses, and recommendations. Their work depends on the quality and accuracy of the information they bring to the table.
Liminary's answer:
Liminary is built on an AI-native architecture using semantic ingestion that preserves meaning at sub-document granularity, a context detection engine that predicts what knowledge is relevant to your current work, and an MCP-ready infrastructure that allows integration with other AI tools and agents. Available as a Chrome extension and web app.
Based on our record, Apache Solr seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 19 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
SolrโโโOpen-source search platform built on Apache Lucene. - Source: dev.to / about 2 years ago
I want to spend the brunt of this article talking about how to do this in Postgres, partly because it's a little more difficult there. But let me start in Apache Solr, which is where I first worked on these issues. - Source: dev.to / about 2 years ago
Using the Galaxy UI, knowledge workers can systematically review the best results from all configured services including Apache Solr, ChatGPT, Elastic, OpenSearch, PostgreSQL, Google BigQuery, plus generic HTTP/GET/POST with configurations for premium services like Google's Programmable Search Engine, Miro and Northern Light Research. - Source: dev.to / almost 3 years ago
Apache Solr can be used to index and search text-based documents. It supports a wide range of file formats including PDFs, Microsoft Office documents, and plain text files. https://solr.apache.org/. Source: about 3 years ago
If so, then https://solr.apache.org/ can be a solution, though there's a bit of setup involved. Oh yea, you get to write your own "search interface" too which would end up calling solr's api to find stuff. Source: over 3 years ago
ElasticSearch - Elasticsearch is an open source, distributed, RESTful search engine.
GetGuru - Get started for free with Guru, the powerful company wiki that cuts through chat noise to serve you the info you actually need to do your job.
Algolia - Algolia's Search API makes it easy to deliver a great search experience in your apps & websites. Algolia Search provides hosted full-text, numerical, faceted and geolocalized search.
Feedly - The content you need to accelerate your research, marketing, and sales.
Swiftype - The simplest way to add search to your website or application. Sign up for free.
alphasense - AlphaSense finds information on companies, data and themes from within millions of research documents in seconds, all with ONE simple search.