Miqurios Builds a Dashboard for the Email-Forwarding Class

Founder Ravin Singh's Curiosity OS asks users to forward article links to an inbox, betting on a new path for content discovery.

About Miqurios, Inc.

Published

You find something interesting. The tab sits there, a promise of a future you, the one who will read it later. You could bookmark it, or send it to a read-later app, or let it join the dozens of other tabs slowly turning your browser into a digital hoarder's den. Or, according to a new startup called Miqurios, you could email it. You could forward the URL to share@email.miqurios.com and trust that somewhere, a system called the Signal Engine will evaluate it, rank it, and slot it into a personalized dashboard called the Curiosity OS [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief, 2025]. It is an act of faith in a process you cannot see, a tiny ritual for the overwhelmed knowledge worker.

The Wedge of the Inbox

The product, as described, is starkly simple. There is no browser extension to install, no complex onboarding flow. The interaction is the email forward, a gesture so ingrained it feels almost analog. Miqurios is betting that this low-friction, familiar action is its wedge into the messy world of content discovery. The target is the individual drowning in click-optimized feeds and algorithmically sorted podcasts, the person who wants to connect ideas but lacks a system [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief, 2025]. By starting with user-submitted URLs, the platform aims to build a map of a single person's intellectual curiosity from the ground up, rather than trying to infer it from browsing behavior or social graphs.

This is a bet on curation as a conscious act, and on email as a viable command line for your digital brain. The company's stated ambition is to turn fragmented sources,podcasts, newsletters, articles,into a unified, curiosity-driven discovery experience [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief, 2025]. It is a quiet, almost academic counterpoint to the noisy, engagement-driven feeds that dominate the landscape.

The Solo Founder's Path

The company is the project of Ravin Singh, a solo founder based in San Jose. His public background shows a path through corporate strategy and business development roles at companies like Amazon and Juniper Networks, with more recent experience at the INSEAD AI Venture Lab and as an advisor at Berkeley SkyDeck [LinkedIn Profile - Ravin Singh, 2026] [RocketReach Profile - Ravin Singh, 2026] [Berkeley SkyDeck, 2026]. This is not the profile of a serial consumer app founder, but of someone who has operated at the intersection of technology and commercial strategy across multiple sectors. The choice to build a tool for personal knowledge management suggests a founder solving a problem he has likely lived in those roles.

Miqurios is pre-product-market fit by any public measure. No funding rounds, customers, or press coverage are disclosed in available records. The company was incorporated in August 2025, placing it in the earliest stages of existence [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief, 2025]. The lack of a careers page or named enterprise focus signals a team, and a vision, that is still being assembled.

The Questions in the Quiet

For a concept built on the aggregation of signals, Miqurios itself emits very few. The primary public risks are those inherent to any pre-launch, founder-led venture building in a crowded space.

  • The cold-start problem. A discovery engine is only as good as its data. Convincing early users to consistently forward links into a void, with no existing community or visible output, is a steep initial hurdle. The value must materialize quickly after that first act of faith.
  • The habit hurdle. While emailing a link is simple, it is also a context switch. It competes with one-click save buttons built into browsers and major platforms. The convenience delta must be significant to create a new, sustained behavior.
  • The monetization mystery. The current model is unspecified. Whether this remains a freemium tool for individuals, evolves into a team-based knowledge hub, or something else entirely, is a question for a later chapter.

The company's most plausible answer to these challenges is its stark minimalism. By reducing the initial ask to a single, familiar action, it lowers the barrier to that first try. The entire bet rests on what happens after that email is sent,whether the resulting dashboard feels like a revelation or just another silo.

Every new tool for thought implicitly asks a cultural question. The dominant platforms ask, "What will keep you scrolling?" Read-later apps ask, "What will you actually return to?" Miqurios, with its email-forwarding protocol and its Curiosity OS, seems to be asking something different: "What are you trying to build in your own mind?" It is a question for architects, not just consumers. The success of the product will depend on how many people have an answer, and how badly they want a system to help them see it take shape.

Sources

  1. [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief, 2025] Miqurios company brief | https://www.perplexity.ai/
  2. [LinkedIn Profile - Ravin Singh, 2026] Ravin Singh - Miqurios | https://www.linkedin.com/in/ravinsingh/
  3. [RocketReach Profile, 2026] Ravin Singh Email & Phone Number | https://rocketreach.co/ravin-singh-email_3134066
  4. [Berkeley SkyDeck, 2026] Advisors - Berkeley SKYDECK | https://skydeck.berkeley.edu/advisors/

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