Key differences explained
Manual vs automatic organization
With Albo, you are responsible for organizing your saves. When you share a link, Albo asks: which collection should this go in? You might create collections for "Recipes," "Fashion," "Home Ideas," etc. Over time, managing these collections becomes work. Saves pile up unsorted, collections grow unwieldy, and finding something later requires remembering which collection it went into.
Sorti flips this. You save, and AI organizes. No collections to create, no decisions to make. Saves are automatically categorized by content type and meaning. This scales infinitely - you can save hundreds of things per week and everything stays organized. Search becomes easy because Sorti uses semantic understanding, not just keyword matching.
Content types supported
Albo is built for links. You can share links from browsers, recipes from websites, and content from social media. It does this well. But Albo does not handle screenshots from your camera roll - which is a major limitation because many people save visual inspiration as screenshots rather than just links.
Sorti accepts links, screenshots, PDFs, images, and shared content from any app. It uses OCR to read text and images within screenshots, then categorizes based on the actual content. A screenshot of a recipe is treated the same as a recipe link - both get parsed for ingredients and steps. A screenshot of a product gets price tracking. This versatility means Sorti can become your unified save-everything app, not just a link repository.
Actionable features beyond organizing
Albo organizes links into collections. Sorti organizes and then makes your saves actionable. When you save a product link to Sorti, the app automatically extracts the price and begins tracking it - you get a notification when the price drops. When you save a recipe, Sorti pulls out ingredients and prep time. When you save a restaurant, it gets mapped. These features transform saving from a passive action into something useful.
Albo does not have these actionable features. It is a curation tool - great for building lists and collections, but less useful for actually doing something with what you save.
Search capabilities
Albo lets you search and filter by collection and tags. This works if you have organized everything perfectly, but it requires remembering which collection something went into. Sorti uses semantic search, which means you can search by meaning. For example, you can search "that pasta recipe I saved last month" and Sorti will surface the right result even if the page title does not contain the word pasta. This is especially powerful because it does not require you to remember tags or exact titles - just describe what you are looking for.
Pricing and sustainability
Albo is free with some limits, and like most free-to-start apps, may introduce paid tiers in the future. Sorti is completely free with all features available - no premium tier, no ads, no subscription. Sorti monetizes through optional affiliate links on saved products, so you benefit (finding deals) rather than paying. This means Sorti is designed to stay free as it scales.