The Facebook News Feed turns 20 in September 2026, and HyperTexting is betting that the open web can borrow the feed without surrendering to the platform.

Open Web Fights Back With HyperTexting App's Social Feed
XOOMAR Intelligence
Analyst Take
The newly available iOS app turns websites, blogs, newsletters, and podcasts into a vertically scrollable stream, while also trying to make posting to your own website feel as simple as sending a text, according to TechCrunch. That makes HyperTexting app an unusual hybrid: part RSS reader, part publishing tool, part attempt to make personal websites feel alive again.
“Somewhere along the way, social media came, and it was easier to make a page and post to your page than it was a website,” Caleb Hailey told TechCrunch. “And the rest is history.”
That’s the tension. The feed won because it’s easy. The open web lost because it became work.
Why should social media users care that HyperTexting turns the open web into a feed?
HyperTexting matters because it targets a very specific frustration: people still like the speed of social apps, but many don’t like how much of the web now has to pass through them.
The app’s pitch is simple. Follow people, sites, news outlets, blogs, newsletters, and podcasts. Then read or listen inside one feed, without hopping between tabs, inboxes, podcast apps, bookmarks, and old-school RSS tools.
Hailey, a 20-year tech veteran, told TechCrunch he was pushed toward the idea after growing dissatisfied with Twitter. He said Twitter “used to be a good place to discover things and share things” before it became less focused on reverse chronological updates, and added that “links got deranked.”
HyperTexting’s response is not to build another closed social network. It tries to make the World Wide Web behave more like one, at least on the surface.
XOOMAR analysis: that distinction is the product’s strongest idea. The interface borrows from social media, but the underlying premise points away from platform lock-in. If it works, the feed becomes a way back to independent sites, not a replacement for them.
How does HyperTexting make websites, blogs, newsletters, and podcasts feel like a social feed?
The HyperTexting app wraps open web content in familiar social media patterns: a scrollable feed, profiles, follow buttons, likes, comments, and posts with multimedia.
Users can follow websites and creators with a click. Their updates then appear in a timeline that TechCrunch describes as feeling “very much like a modern-day social media feed.” The app can surface articles, essays, multimedia posts, newsletters, and podcasts.
Under the hood, HyperTexting uses RSS, but it does not lead with that in its marketing. That’s a smart choice. RSS still powers major parts of the web, including WordPress blogs and podcast feeds, but mainstream users never embraced manual feed management the way journalists, researchers, and heavy readers did.
Here’s the practical difference:
| Product type | What users get | Where HyperTexting tries to differ |
|---|---|---|
| Social apps | Familiar feeds, profiles, follows, likes, comments | Similar interface, but pointed at the open web |
| RSS readers | Direct updates from chosen sites | Feed-first design aimed at less technical users |
| Newsletter inboxes | Publisher updates in email | A single scrollable place for web and newsletter-like content |
| Podcast apps | Audio feeds | Podcasts sit beside articles and posts |
The result is less a new protocol than a new wrapper. HyperTexting takes existing web behavior and repackages it in a format social users already understand.
What problem is HyperTexting trying to fix in personal publishing?
Reading is only half the pitch. HyperTexting also wants to make publishing to your own site less painful.
That matters because personal websites still carry friction. You need a site, a CMS or generator, a workflow, formatting, distribution, and some way to get readers back. Social apps collapsed that into a text box and a button.
HyperTexting is trying to close that gap. TechCrunch says the app lets users add their own website, including a WordPress blog, Ghost newsletter, Hugo site, or a site built with HyperTexting’s own HyperTemplates product. Users can then post to their own site instead of a centralized platform.
Those posts can include hyperlinks, @mentions, #hashtags, photos, videos, podcasts, and PDFs, according to related source material from HyperTexting coverage. The post links back to the original site or article and can appear for users following that same site.
XOOMAR analysis: this is where HyperTexting becomes more interesting than a nicer RSS reader. The product is trying to solve both sides of the web’s participation problem: discovery for readers and low-friction posting for creators.
For creators and small publishers, the appeal is clear. Own the site. Keep the social rhythm. Avoid making a third-party profile the only home for your work.
What would using HyperTexting look like for an independent creator?
Consider a hypothetical solo tech writer with one weekly blog post, a newsletter version of the same piece, and a short podcast update.
Today, that workflow is scattered. The writer publishes on a website, sends an email, posts links on social networks, and hopes readers don’t miss the update. Some readers prefer email. Others want a feed. Others only see links if a social app decides to show them.
In the HyperTexting version, readers follow the writer’s site inside the app. New posts appear in the scrollable feed. Podcast updates can sit in the same flow. If the writer replies to an article or adds a new thought, that update can live on the writer’s own website rather than disappearing into a platform timeline.
That is the bigger product thesis: keep the ownership model of the open web, but reduce the effort required to read and publish there.
There’s one caveat. A feed can increase convenience, but it can also turn thoughtful reading into passive consumption. HyperTexting’s challenge is to make the open web easier without flattening it into another endless scroll.
Where could HyperTexting struggle against social apps, RSS readers, and newsletter platforms?
HyperTexting has a habit problem to solve.
Readers already have social apps, inboxes, browsers, podcast apps, and in some cases RSS readers like NetNewsWire or Feedly. Hailey himself returned to NetNewsWire after uninstalling social apps from his phone, TechCrunch reported. That experience helped shape HyperTexting.
But mainstream adoption is harder. RSS readers have been around for years. Google shut down Google Reader in 2013, and TechCrunch notes that no other RSS tools have gone mainstream since.
HyperTexting’s advantage is usability. Its risk is that people may not need another feed unless it proves better every day.
A few pressure points stand out:
- Discovery: The app includes an Explore section for trending web content, but users will judge whether it surfaces enough worthwhile material.
- Control: The promise is an algorithm-free feed, so the app has to make following, filtering, and managing sources feel clean.
- Publishing friction: If posting to a personal site still feels technical, the core creator pitch weakens.
- Business model: TechCrunch reports the app is currently a free iOS download, with possible future premium subscriptions or a single sponsored post per day.
For adjacent XOOMAR reading on social product experiments, see 300,000 Users Turn Roost Slow-Cial App Into a Warning. For coverage of how major platforms are pushing user content into new product layers, read Meta Muse Image Turns Your Instagram Posts Into AI Prompts.
Can HyperTexting make the open web social without repeating social media’s worst habits?
HyperTexting’s best idea is also its biggest risk: it makes the web feel like social media.
That could help independent sites, newsletters, and podcasts compete for attention without forcing creators to live entirely inside closed platforms. It could also pull users back into the same scroll behavior Hailey says he wanted to escape.
The product will be worth watching if it keeps five things intact: source quality, user control, low-friction publishing, clear creator benefits, and a feed that sends people deeper into the web instead of trapping them inside the app.
Hailey’s most pointed claim to TechCrunch was that “the greatest decentralized social network ever created already exists, and it’s called the World Wide Web.”
HyperTexting now has to prove that the web doesn’t just need ideals. It needs an interface people will actually open every day.
Key Takeaways
- HyperTexting tries to bring the convenience of social feeds to the open web without creating another closed network.
- The app addresses frustration with social platforms that reduce link visibility or move away from chronological discovery.
- If it works, personal websites, blogs, newsletters, and podcasts could become easier to follow in one place.
HyperTexting vs. Traditional Social Feeds
| Aspect | HyperTexting | Traditional Social Platforms |
|---|---|---|
| Content source | Websites, blogs, newsletters, podcasts, and personal sites | Posts hosted inside a closed platform |
| User experience | Scrollable feed built on the open web | Scrollable feed controlled by the platform |
| Publishing model | Aims to make posting to your own website feel like texting | Makes posting to a platform page simple |
| Discovery concern | Designed around following web sources directly | Can downrank links or shift away from reverse chronological updates |
Sources
Written by
XOOMAR Insights Team
Research and Editorial Desk
The XOOMAR Insights Team pairs automated research with human editorial judgment. We track hundreds of sources across technology, fintech, trading, SaaS, and cybersecurity, cross-check the facts, and explain what happened, why it matters, and what to watch next. We do not just rewrite headlines. Every article is fact-checked and scored for reliability before it goes live, and we link back to the original sources so you can verify anything yourself.
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