Back to GO AI Neurobase · iPhone & iPad

Turn anything into
a cited knowledge base.

PDFs, web pages, audio, video. Neurobase organizes them into Neurons and answers with citations on every line. Wire Neurons together in a visual editor for pipelines that summarize, compare, and merge across multiple sources at once.

Neurobase pipeline editor on iPhone — Research → Critique → Report with seven nodes (Input, Duplicate, Harvard Business, Marketing, Compare, Summarize, Output) wired by curved lavender connections on a cream dotted canvas. Neurobase pipelines list on iPhone — Research → Critique → Report, Study Q&A Engine, Daily Brief Generator with status badges.

Seven source types · One cited knowledge base

01

Every source becomes a Neuron

A Neuron is a small AI assistant trained on the sources you give it. Drop in a PDF, a YouTube link, a podcast episode, a CSV — Neurobase ingests it, indexes it, and gives you a focused expert that only answers from that material, with citations back to the original line, page, or timestamp.

  • One Neuron per topic — keep your knowledge isolated and clean
  • Live status — Ready, Processing, Idle — for every Neuron
  • Search the entire library by name or source title
  • Combine input and output types — text → text, text → JSON, and more
iPhone — Neurons tab listing 8 neurons across 58 sources, with stats and a list including Cooking Essentials, Marketing Playbook 2026, Legal Research, and Deep Learning Mastery, each marked Ready.
02

Drop in any source, pick the format

Seven input types — Text, Structured, Image, Video, Audio, PDF, Website. Pick what your Neuron should output — plain text, JSON, XML, YAML, Markdown, CSV. The Neuron handles the conversion in the background, so you can wire it into any pipeline without rewriting the schema by hand.

  • Seven input source types, six output formats
  • Audio and video transcribed automatically before indexing
  • Websites fetched, parsed, and indexed with the source URL preserved
  • Structured outputs ready to plug into the next Neuron
iPhone — New Neuron form with name 'Harvard Business Case Library', description, input type picker (Text, Structured, Image, Video, Audio, PDF), output type, and output format options (JSON, XML, YAML, Markdown, CSV).
03

Wire Neurons into pipelines

The visual editor lets you drag Neurons onto a canvas and connect them by their input and output ports. A pipeline can fan out — duplicate a query across two Neurons — and fan back in to compare, summarize, or merge results. No code, no YAML, no glue scripts.

  • Drag, drop, connect — the whole graph at a glance
  • Operations: Duplicate, Compare, Summarize, Merge, Filter
  • Saved diagrams persist between sessions
  • Tap any node to edit its prompt, model, or output type
iPhone — Pipeline editor showing the Research → Critique → Report graph: Input flows into a Duplicate operation, which fans out to Harvard Business and Marketing Neurons, both feeding a Compare node, then Summarize, then Output, all on the cream dotted canvas.
04

Test single Neurons in the Lab

Before you wire a Neuron into a pipeline, sanity-check it. Open the Lab, type a prompt, see exactly what comes back — including which sources the answer cited and how long it took. Iterate the description and prompt until the response is right; then drop the Neuron into your pipeline with confidence.

  • Single-Neuron sandbox with timing and source attribution
  • History of every test run, scoped to that Neuron
  • Run again with one tap — instant compare against last answer
  • Catch hallucinations early, before they propagate downstream
iPhone — Test Neuron view for the Data Structures and Algorithms Neuron. Input 'Explain LinkedList' produces a multi-paragraph cited answer in 4,725ms with sources used: DSA.pdf.
05

Run a pipeline, see every step

Hit Run. Neurobase walks each step in order: Query → Text→JSON → JSON→Image → Image→Audio. You see the input, the output, and the time for every node, with a green check when it's done. Open any step to inspect its full payload, save the run, or replay just that step.

  • Sequential or parallel execution, your choice
  • Per-step timing — find the slow Neuron in seconds
  • Open Run #N for full history of every payload
  • Run Again replays the whole pipeline with one tap
iPhone — Run Pipeline sheet showing four sequential steps with green checkmarks: Query (11,204ms), Text→JSON (8,230ms), JSON→Image (5,576ms), Image→Audio (58,416ms). A Run Again button is pinned at the bottom. iPhone — Run #1 detail showing the full Query response, an inline Structured → Image preview with rendered linked-list diagram, and an Image → Audio step with a playback control.
06

See your sources as a network

Every Neuron has a Visualization view: a force-directed graph of the Neuron at the center, with each source attached around it. Tap a node to jump to that source. It's the fastest way to spot which documents a Neuron actually leans on when answering, and which are dead weight.

  • Source attribution at a glance
  • Node count badges show how often each source is cited
  • Quick Actions: Test in Lab, Publish, Edit, Delete
  • Add Source from the same screen
iPhone — Deep Learning Mastery Neuron detail with Quick Actions (Test in Lab, Publish, Edit, Delete), a network visualization of the central brain node connected to PDF, web, video, and image sources with cite counts, and an 'Attached Sources' footer.
07

A Marketplace of shareable Neurons

Publish a Neuron and let anyone subscribe. Browse Featured and Trending — USMLE Step 1 prep, Warren Buffett letters, EU AI Act — and add them to your library with one tap. Sources, prompts, and citations come along intact. Curate, share, monetize, or just bring along your own templates between devices.

  • Featured and Trending sections, refreshed daily
  • Filter by Research, Education, Business, Creative
  • One-tap install — sources sync to your library
  • Publish your own and share by link
iPhone — Marketplace tab with a featured USMLE Step 1 Full Prep card (12 textbooks, 400+ lectures), Trending list including React 19+ and Warren Buffett, plus filter pills (All, Research, Education, Business, Creative).
08

Built-in Learn path

Don't know where to start? The Learn tab walks you through Neurobase from beginner to advanced — Beginner: source types and basic Neurons. Intermediate: the Lab, building Neurobases, operations. Advanced: media converters, combined Neurons, nesting. Track progress as you go; lessons are short and tap-runnable.

  • 10 lessons across Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced tracks
  • 2–4 minute lessons, with checkmarks as you complete them
  • Run examples right from the lesson screen
  • Progress ring shows your way through the curriculum
iPhone — Learn tab with a 5/10 progress ring, Beginner section (What Are Neurons?, Source Types Deep Dive — both completed), Intermediate (The Testing Lab, Building Neurobases, Operations Explained), and an Advanced section.

Made for iPhone.
Right at home on iPad.

One purchase covers iPhone and iPad. Build a pipeline on the train; review the run on the couch. The whole Neurobase travels with your Apple ID.

Neurobase on iPad — top-tab navigation (Neurons, Neurobases, Lab, Learn, Market) with 8 Neurons across 58 sources. Neurobase pipeline editor on iPhone.

Ready to build a Neuron?

Free to download. Bring your own sources. Citations on every line.

Questions? [email protected]