Oyster quietly collects the things you save from any app — links, screenshots, receipts, documents — then reads them, names them, and files them so you can actually find them again. All on your iPhone.
You screenshot a recipe, save a video link, snap a receipt, bookmark a place to visit — then lose all of it in the noise of your camera roll and browser tabs. Oyster is the shell around it: everything you save lands in one tidy place, understood and searchable, waiting for the moment you need it.
No folders to babysit, no accounts to create, nothing leaving your phone. Just save, and let Oyster do the sorting.
Oyster fits the way you already save things — it just makes them stick.
Share a link, image, or file from any app straight into Oyster — or paste a link and pull in photos and documents right inside.
Oyster fetches titles, reads the text inside your screenshots and receipts, and tags each item automatically — on your device, the moment it arrives.
Search the way you remember — “that jacket I saw,” “the restaurant a friend mentioned” — or browse by tag, source, or the newest-first Recent view.
Group related items under a title, add notes, see your photos on a map, lock the app with Face ID, and share a whole tag with someone you trust.
A capture tool, a reader, a search engine, and a shoebox of memories — all in one.
Links from X, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok and Safari, plus screenshots, photos, PDFs and documents — captured in a tap through the share sheet or added right in the app.
Built-in text recognition pulls the words out of screenshots, photos, and even scanned receipts — so a picture of a menu becomes something you can actually search.
Paste a bare link and Oyster fetches a real, readable title and thumbnail automatically — no more walls of anonymous URLs.
Items are sorted into meaningful topics the instant you save them — using smart, on-device rules, not a cloud service that reads your data.
On-device semantic search understands what you mean, not just the exact words — describe a thing loosely and Oyster surfaces it, even in a wordless photo’s neighbours.
A newest-first view of everything you’ve added, across every tag — perfect for finding what you just saved and where it landed.
See where a picture was taken, pinned on a map. Retrace a trip, find that shop, or remember exactly where you snapped something.
Hand a tag to someone with a simple link. You both see the same items and can add to it together — collaboration with no middle-man server involved.
Turn on Face ID and your whole collection stays private behind a glance — even if your phone is in someone else’s hands.
The difference isn’t a longer feature list. It’s that all of it runs quietly on your own phone, for you alone.
Links, screenshots, photos, receipts and documents live side by side — not split across a browser, a notes app, and a camera roll. One shell for all of it.
Titles, extracted text, automatic tags and meaning-based search turn a pile of saved things into a collection you can actually navigate.
All the reading, tagging and searching happens on-device. Your items sync only through your own private iCloud — no account to sign up for, no servers holding your data, nothing sold, no ads.
Fast and native, with Face ID, iCloud sync across your devices, quick previews, pinch-to-zoom, and collaborative sharing built the Apple way.
“I screenshot recipes, save videos to try, snap receipts, and bookmark places to go — then never find any of it again.”
That’s exactly the mess Oyster was built for. Save it all in the moment without a second thought, and trust that when you’re standing in the kitchen, planning a trip, or filing an expense, a quick search brings it right back — text, image, link and all.
Oyster turns the things you’d otherwise lose into a private, searchable collection that’s always with you.