A while back, I came across Andrej Karpathy's llm-wiki concept and felt an instant sense of resonance. I've always enjoyed writing things down, but the problem was that everything ended up scattered across different places, and I never had the energy to manage it properly. When I discovered llm-wiki, I realized — all that stuff I'd been writing over the years was finally going to pay off.
Why a Knowledge Hub
First, what is llm-wiki?
llm-wiki is a concept recently proposed by Andrej Karpathy: take all the written material you've accumulated over the years — notes, blog posts, reading highlights, work logs — treat it as a "corpus," and let an LLM automatically extract concepts, create pages, and weave cross-references into a structured, continuously evolving personal wiki.
The core premise is simple: everyone produces a substantial amount of structured, insightful writing in their daily work and learning — it's just scattered everywhere with no connections. llm-wiki uses an LLM-driven process to string these scattered pearls together. You keep producing and collecting content; the LLM handles the organization and management.








