• A Quick Reminder About MindMap.NeuralGlass.Design
    Not New — Just Still Worth Seeing | baileygwyn.xyz

    Not New — Just Still Worth Seeing

    It has been public for a bit now, so this is your nudge if you meant to check it out and never got around to it.

    MindMap.NeuralGlass.Design has been out in the world long enough now that it felt worth mentioning again. Not in a launch-day voice. Just in the normal, human way we remember to point back to the things we made once the noise has passed.

    Sometimes A Reminder Is Better Than A Launch Thread

    I like the quieter phase after something has been public for a while. It gives people room to actually see it without the pressure of newness. It also gives me room to talk about it without pretending everything has to sound urgent.

    If You Missed It The First Time

    • The link is live: mindmap.neuralglass.design
    • This is the reminder: you do not have to catch everything when it first appears.
    • This is me saying it plainly: it is still there, and you are still welcome to take a look.

    No Manufactured Urgency

    I am not trying to make this sound bigger than it is. I just know how easy it is for good things to disappear in the timeline, and sometimes a second mention is the more useful one.

    The Internet Moves Fast. People Do Not Have To.

    If you have already seen it, thank you. If you have not, that is exactly why reminder posts exist. There is nothing wrong with arriving later.


    Anyway, Here Is Your Reminder

    MindMap.NeuralGlass.Design is public. It has been public for a bit. And if it sounds interesting to you now more than it did then, that still counts.

    Not everything meaningful needs a countdown. Some things just need to stay available long enough to be found.

    You can check it out here: mindmap.neuralglass.design.

  • Neural MindMap Is Live: A Free Web App for Mapping Ideas Visually

    Neural MindMap: A Free Tool for Visual Thinking

    A lightweight mind-mapping web app designed for researchers, thinkers, and builders who prefer seeing ideas as systems rather than lists.

    Today I’m launching a small project I’ve been quietly building: Neural MindMap.

    It’s a free web app designed to help people organize ideas visually. Instead of writing notes line-by-line, you can create nodes, expand thoughts outward, and build a living map of how concepts relate to each other.

    If you spend a lot of time thinking about complex systems — research, medicine, software architecture, philosophy, or even personal planning — you’ll recognize the problem this tries to solve:

    Most tools force ideas into straight lines.

    But real thinking rarely moves in straight lines.

    Why I Built It

    Many note-taking systems are optimized for storage. They are good at capturing information, but not always good at exploring relationships between ideas.

    Mind maps solve that problem by letting concepts branch outward. Instead of forcing hierarchy too early, they allow thought to expand naturally.

    Neural MindMap was built to make that process simple and accessible — no installs, no accounts required, just open the page and start mapping ideas.

    What It’s Useful For

    People can use tools like this for:

    • Planning research papers
    • Designing software architecture
    • Mapping study topics
    • Brainstorming projects
    • Structuring complex arguments

    Anything where ideas benefit from being seen as a network rather than a list.

    A Small Part of a Larger Ecosystem

    This tool is part of a broader collection of projects I’ve been building around systems thinking, research tools, and independent digital infrastructure.

    The goal is simple: create tools that help people think more clearly and work more independently.

    Neural MindMap is one small step in that direction.