Craft and publish engaging content in an app built for creators.
NEW
Publish anywhere
Post on LinkedIn & Mastodon too. More platforms coming soon.
Make it punchier 👊
Typefully
@typefully
We're launching a Command Bar today with great commands and features.
AI ideas and rewrites
Get suggestions, tweet ideas, and rewrites powered by AI.
Turn your tweets & threads into a social blog
Give your content new life with our beautiful, sharable pages. Make it go viral on other platforms too.
+14
Followers
Powerful analytics to grow faster
Easily track your engagement analytics to improve your content and grow faster.
Build in public
Share a recent learning with your followers.
Create engagement
Pose a thought-provoking question.
Never run out of ideas
Get prompts and ideas whenever you write - with examples of popular tweets.
@aaditsh
I think this thread hook could be improved.
@frankdilo
On it 🔥
Share drafts & leave comments
Write with your teammates and get feedback with comments.
NEW
Easlo
@heyeaslo
Reply with "Notion" to get early access to my new template.
Jaga
@kandros5591
Notion 🙏
DM Sent
Create giveaways with Auto-DMs
Send DMs automatically based on engagement with your tweets.
And much more:
Auto-Split Text in Posts
Thread Finisher
Tweet Numbering
Pin Drafts
Connect Multiple Accounts
Automatic Backups
Dark Mode
Keyboard Shortcuts
Creators love Typefully
150,000+ creators and teams chose Typefully to curate their Twitter presence.
Marc Köhlbrugge@marckohlbrugge
Tweeting more with @typefully these days.
🙈 Distraction-free
✍️ Write-only Twitter
🧵 Effortless threads
📈 Actionable metrics
I recommend giving it a shot.
Jurre Houtkamp@jurrehoutkamp
Typefully is fantastic and way too cheap for what you get.
We’ve tried many alternatives at @framer but nothing beats it. If you’re still tweeting from Twitter you’re wasting time.
DHH@dhh
This is my new go-to writing environment for Twitter threads.
They've built something wonderfully simple and distraction free with Typefully 😍
Santiago@svpino
For 24 months, I tried almost a dozen Twitter scheduling tools.
Then I found @typefully, and I've been using it for seven months straight.
When it comes down to the experience of scheduling and long-form content writing, Typefully is in a league of its own.
Luca Rossi ꩜@lucaronin
After trying literally all the major Twitter scheduling tools, I settled with @typefully.
Killer feature to me is the native image editor — unique and super useful 🙏
Visual Theory@visualtheory_
Really impressed by the way @typefully has simplified my Twitter writing + scheduling/publishing experience.
Beautiful user experience.
0 friction.
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.
Queue your content in seconds
Write, schedule and boost your tweets - with no need for extra apps.
Schedule with one click
Queue your post with a single click - or pick a time manually.
Pick the perfect time
Time each post to perfection with Typefully's performance analytics.
Boost your content
Retweet and plug your posts for automated engagement.
Start creating a content queue.
Write once, publish everywhere
We natively support multiple platforms, so that you can expand your reach easily.
Check the analytics that matter
Build your audience with insights that make sense.
Writing prompts & personalized post ideas
Break through writer's block with great ideas and suggestions.
Never run out of ideas
Enjoy daily prompts and ideas to inspire your writing.
Use AI for personalized suggestions
Get inspiration from ideas based on your own past tweets.
Flick through topics
Or skim through curated collections of trending tweets for each topic.
Write, edit, and track tweets together
Write and publish with your teammates and friends.
Share your drafts
Brainstorm and bounce ideas with your teammates.
NEW
@aaditsh
I think this thread hook could be improved.
@frankdilo
On it 🔥
Add comments
Get feedback from coworkers before you hit publish.
Read, Write, Publish
Read, WriteRead
Control user access
Decide who can view, edit, or publish your drafts.
Until now, many children in the Arab world have not been taught about the genocide which so shames the West, mainly because it involves Jews and might require them to pity and maybe understand the people they have previously been told to hate.
Here in the West, meanwhile, we seem to be going backwards as Jews gradually become erased from Holocaust Memorial Day (HMD). In fact, in recent years Jewish people have been accused of greedily trying to hoard the Holocaust to make the Nazi crimes all about them.
‘Jews do not have a monopoly on persecution and atrocities. For one group to claim that the hate and violence towards them is more important than another’s only encourages more acts of violence against others.’
Perhaps most depressingly, the determination not to centre Jews in a day that commemorates their own genocide has reached Germany.
Elsewhere, the country’s Independent Commissioner for anti-discrimination, Ferda Ataman, wrote a press release ostensibly
‘commemorating’ HMD by pushing for more protection for gay and gender non-conforming people, and not mentioning Jews, Roma or any other group targeted for genocide by the Nazis:
jpost.com/international/article-729865
‘Many people in Germany no longer know that homosexual and trans people were also killed by the Nazis in concentration camps,’ Ataman writes.
‘That’s why it’s all the more important that ‘sexual identity’ is finally named as worthy of protection in our constitution.’
German historian Alexander Zinn, who specialises in the persecution of homosexuals under the Nazis, was incandescent.
While up to 15,000 gay people (mainly men) were killed by the Nazis because of their sexuality, there is no evidence that trans people were victimised.
He warned against ‘bending history in order to get hold of the prestige that comes with belonging to a persecuted group’.
Just a few days earlier 16 of them had attempted to introduce a law banning the kosher slaughter of animals.
The main argument of those who want to reduce the centrality of Jews to HMD seems to be that we want to create some kind hierarchy of suffering, diminishing the horrors perpetrated against other minorities by making it all about ourselves.
Absurd though this argument clearly is, it has obvious appeal to those who would use any excuse (or any mention of Israel) to indulge their own prejudices.
It is little wonder that many of my Jewish friends find HMD increasingly problematic, as every social media post about it gets flooded with hatred and Palestinian flags.
It’s worth recalling the genesis of Holocaust Memorial Day, and why the day is so important to Jewish people.
Israel, a state founded in part by Holocaust survivors, started commemorating the Jewish dead in 1949. No one else was really interested at that point – almost everyone in Europe had suffered some sort of privation, lost loved ones, been bombed or invaded.
After some debate, a date was set in April, around the start of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. Every year on what is known as Yom HaShoah (Shoah is the Hebrew word for ‘catastrophe’) Israel becomes a place of mourning.
Theatres and cinemas are shut, flags on public building are flown at half mast and at 10am an air-raid siren sounds for the start of two minutes of silence; even motorists stop their cars in the middle of the road to stand up and reflect on the huge loss.
The Western version of Holocaust Memorial Day – first initiated by the Blair Government in the UK in 2001 and then taken up by the UN –
is on January 27 because it is the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, where around 1.1 million Jews were herded into gas chambers and their corpses burned.
None of this has stopped attempts to broaden the scope of Holocaust Memorial Day.
Tellingly, the initiative had come from an anti-Zionist group called the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network IJAN who made their reason quite clear:
‘The Zionist exploitation of this genocide to justify colonisation, displacement and apartheid in Palestine is a dishonour to those who survived and those who did not.’
And while the motion failed, its demands have come true anyway. The Holocaust Memorial Day Trust now enjoins us to remember not just the victims of the Nazis, but those in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur too.
But though an undoubtedly noble idea, this doesn’t leave much space for the very particular form of hatred – antisemitism – which led the Nazis to murder two thirds of Europe’s Jews, including 1.5 million children.
It also doesn’t leave much space for the specific hatred of the Roma and Sinti people – another huge issue which, like antisemitism, continues to this day.
They rightly have their own memorial day, August 2, which (like Yom HaShoah) commemorates a famous fightback, when they briefly held out against the Nazis in Auschwitz.
And how do the complex stories behind the genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur get jumbled up together with the Holocaust?
Rather than folding other events into HMD, wouldn’t it be better to have a separate Genocide Day where we look at not only genocides of the past, but ones of today such as the Chinese mass incarceration of the Uighurs?
The most pressing issue at the moment, however, is that antisemitism continues unabated, with recorded incidents at a record high in 2021.
bbc.co.uk/news/uk-60322106
British children need to be taught not just the historical facts of the Holocaust, and the Nazis crimes against humanity, but that antisemitism remains a threat today.
One need only look at the Pittsburgh synagogue massacre or the violence meted out to French Jews to see just how lethal that hatred can be.
And on the evening of this year’s HMD, seven Israelis were killed in Jerusalem as they left synagogue, a reminder for Jews like me that we will never be safe from people who want to kill us, even in our ancestral homeland.
The Holocaust isn’t a cautionary tale that this could happen to ‘anyone, anywhere’. It is a lesson about what antisemitism if left unchecked can lead to. And that needs to start by putting the reality of anti-Jewish hatred at the heart of HMD.