Rewritten
This week: a small experiment in tool-hopping that ended right where it started.
I spent this year testing four different note-taking apps — Obsidian, Notion, Apple Notes, and Roam — each promising to finally fix how I capture ideas. After months of switching, I landed back on Apple Notes, the plainest option of the bunch.
The lesson wasn't about features. It was that the best tool is whichever one has zero friction between having a thought and writing it down. Everything else is a distraction dressed up as productivity.
About this tool
If you write threads regularly, you've probably got a backlog of ideas that would also make solid newsletter content — but reformatting a thread for email takes real effort. This tool converts the numbered tweet format into a newsletter section with a short framing intro and prose that reads naturally in an inbox rather than a feed. It's meant for creators repurposing thread content into a weekly or monthly send, distinct from the LinkedIn version which targets a more corporate audience and tone.
Frequently asked questions
Does it add a subject line too?+
No — this tool focuses on the body section. Pair it with the newsletter subject line generator tool for a matching subject.
Will it sound too casual for a professional newsletter?+
The tone is conversational by default, which fits most independent newsletters; you can ask the professional-tone tweet tool to adjust individual lines first if needed.
Can I use this for a thread with multiple unrelated points?+
It works best on threads with one central idea. For multi-topic threads, consider running each section through separately for cleaner results.