Personamo

Personamo

Personamo is a modern content aggregation app that allows users to pull content from various news sites, blogs, and subreddits. Users can customize feeds for different personas to get relevant recomme

Personamo screenshot

What is Personamo?

Personamo is a content aggregation tool that pulls articles, posts, and updates from news sites, blogs, and subreddits into custom feeds. Rather than relying on a fixed algorithm, the app lets you build your own by combining AI blocks for prediction, filtering, and ranking. This means you control what appears in your feed and can adjust how strictly the app filters content. It's useful if you follow multiple topics or personas (professional interests, hobbies, research areas) and want each feed tuned to show what matters without clutter. The tool is currently in beta and operates on a freemium model.

Key Features

Multi-source aggregation

collect content from news sites, blogs, and subreddits into one place

Custom personas

create separate feeds for different interests or roles without content bleeding between them

AI block builder

drag-and-drop interface to create your own filtering and ranking logic

Signal-to-noise control

adjust how aggressively the app filters content to match your preferences

Feed customisation

choose which sources contribute to each feed

Pros & Cons

Advantages

  • You control the algorithm instead of being locked into a platform's default rules
  • Separate feeds for different personas keep work, hobbies, and interests organised
  • Pulling from multiple sources in one place saves time switching between sites
  • Freemium pricing means you can try the core features at no cost

Limitations

  • Still in beta, so features may change and stability is not guaranteed
  • Building custom filters requires some effort and understanding of what you want to filter for
  • Limited to sources that are publicly available or that the app has integrated

Use Cases

Industry professional tracking news, research, and industry blogs across their field

Researcher gathering articles from multiple sources on a specific topic

Person managing distinct interests (job-related content, hobby communities, news) in separate feeds

Someone wanting to reduce information overload by tuning out low-signal content