Content-types

The AI workspace for your Twitter bookmarks

Save tweets and threads to a searchable library. Find any bookmarked post by meaning, even years later.

Twitter bookmarks are one of the best learning tools on the internet and one of the worst filing systems. You bookmark a thread about startup pricing. A tweet with a framework for hiring. A chart someone shared about market trends. An insight that connects to something you've been thinking about. Each bookmark takes half a second, and each one sinks into a reverse-chronological list with no search, no folders, and no way to find it again without scrolling through every bookmark you've ever saved. You have hundreds of bookmarked tweets. You revisit almost none of them. The knowledge is technically saved and practically lost. And when the original tweet gets deleted, the bookmark dies with it.

Fabric saves the content of tweets and threads, not just the link, and makes them searchable by meaning alongside everything else in your workspace. The insights you bookmark become a permanent, findable part of your knowledge.


Save tweets and threads with content intact

A Twitter bookmark is a pointer to a tweet. If the tweet gets deleted or the account goes private, the bookmark is empty. Fabric saves the actual content: the text, the images, the thread structure. The saved version is in your library regardless of what happens on the platform.

Save tweets and threads from the web with the web clipper. On mobile, share a tweet to Fabric from the share sheet via the mobile app. Forward a tweet link from email or DMs to email-to-note. The content is captured in seconds, and it's permanent.

Save entire threads, not just individual tweets. A ten-part thread about growth strategy is saved as one complete, readable, searchable piece rather than a single tweet in a list.


Find any tweet by meaning, not by scrolling

Twitter's bookmark list has no meaningful search. Finding a specific bookmarked tweet means scrolling until you recognise it, which stops working after about fifty bookmarks.

AI search reads the text and content of every saved tweet and searches by meaning. Ask "the thread about cold email strategy" or "the chart about SaaS retention benchmarks" or "what [person] said about remote team culture" and find the tweet across your entire library. The search works by concept, so you don't need to remember the exact wording, the author, or when you bookmarked it.

The AI assistant works from your saved tweets too. Ask it to pull together every tweet you've saved about a topic, summarise a thread, or connect a bookmarked insight to a document you're working on. Your Twitter bookmarks become a queryable knowledge base rather than a scroll.


Organised by topic, not by time

Twitter bookmarks are ordered by when you saved them. That's useless for finding anything, because the relevance of a tweet has nothing to do with when you bookmarked it.

Smart organization automatically tags and categorises saved tweets by their content. Tweets about marketing cluster together. Technical threads group with other technical content. Business insights sit alongside related business material. The organisation happens based on what the tweets say, not when you saved them.

The explorer gives you a spatial view of your saved tweets, showing topic clusters and connections. Browse by theme rather than by date. Discover bookmarks you'd forgotten alongside the ones you're looking for.


Connected to your reading, notes, and work

The most valuable Twitter bookmarks are the ones that connect to something else you know. A thread about pricing strategy connects to the market research you're doing. A tweet about writing connects to the article you're drafting. A chart about industry trends connects to the competitive analysis in your workspace. But if saved tweets live in Twitter and everything else lives somewhere else, the connections never form.

In Fabric, saved tweets live alongside your articles, notes, documents, PDFs, voice memos, and every other content type. When you search for a concept, results come from across tweets, articles, and your own notes together. The tweet about pricing strategy and the market research document are findable in the same query. The explorer surfaces connections between tweets and other material automatically.

This is what turns Twitter bookmarks from a dead-end list into an active part of your second brain: the insights from Twitter feed the same system as everything else you read, save, and think.


Annotate and build on what you save

A bookmarked tweet captures someone else's thought. The value often comes from what you think about it: how it applies to your situation, what it reminds you of, what you want to do with the insight.

Annotations let you add your own notes to saved tweets. Mark why you bookmarked it, how it connects to your work, or what action it suggests. The annotations are searchable, so the context you add is as findable as the tweet itself.

Write longer reflections in notes and docs alongside saved tweets. Develop a thread's idea into your own thinking. Use the tweet as a starting point for a blog post, a strategy note, or a project plan. The saved tweet and your writing about it are connected in the same workspace.


Who uses Fabric for Twitter bookmarks

Twitter is a primary knowledge source for many professionals. Founders and indie hackers bookmark business insights, build-in-public threads, and industry commentary. Writers and content creators save inspiration, research, and angles for content planning. Marketers track campaigns, trends, and competitor activity for competitive research. Developers bookmark technical threads, tool recommendations, and architecture discussions. Sales professionals save prospect insights and industry commentary.

For the broader approach to saving and using what you consume, see reading and learning and building a second brain.


Get started

Save your Twitter bookmarks somewhere you can actually find them. Try Fabric free.

Get the web clipper for one-click saving from your browser, or the mobile app for saving from your phone.


FAQs

How do I save a tweet or thread to Fabric?

Use the web clipper on desktop or share the tweet to Fabric from the share sheet on the mobile app. Threads are saved as complete, readable pieces.

Does Fabric save the content or just the link?

Fabric saves the actual content: text, images, and thread structure. The saved version persists even if the original tweet is deleted or the account goes private.

Can I find a saved tweet by describing it?

Yes. AI search reads the content of every saved tweet and searches by meaning. Describe the topic and find it, regardless of the author, the wording, or when you saved it.

Can the AI pull together tweets I've saved about a topic?

Yes. The AI assistant can synthesise across saved tweets, summarise threads, or connect bookmarked insights to other material in your workspace.

Are saved tweets automatically organised?

Yes. Smart organization tags saved tweets by content. Marketing tweets, technical threads, and business insights cluster by topic without manual filing.

Can I annotate saved tweets with my own notes?

Yes. Annotations let you add context to saved tweets. Your notes are searchable alongside the tweet content.

Can I search across saved tweets and my other content together?

Yes. Saved tweets are searchable alongside articles, notes, documents, and everything else. A tweet about pricing and a market research document are findable in the same search.

Can I save tweets from my phone?

Yes. Share any tweet to Fabric from the share sheet on the mobile app.

What happens if the original tweet is deleted?

Your saved version is still in your library, fully searchable. Fabric captures the content at the time you save it.

Can I save entire threads, not just individual tweets?

Yes. Threads are saved as complete, readable pieces with the full context preserved.

Is this better than Twitter's built-in bookmarks?

Twitter's bookmarks are a reverse-chronological list with no search and no organisation. Fabric saves the content, searches by meaning, auto-organises by topic, connects tweets to your other materials, and gives you an AI that synthesises across bookmarks. The difference is between a list you scroll and a library you search.

Are my saved tweets private?

Yes. Your content is encrypted and only visible to you unless you choose to share it. Fabric uses AES-256 encryption and is CASA Tier 2 compliant.

The workspace that thinks with you.
Ready when you are.

The workspace that thinks with you.

Ready when you are.