HyperTexting Transforms Open Web Into Social Media Feed While Sparking Economic Shift

HyperTexting, a new app turning the open web into a scrollable social media-like feed, is redefining user experience. Available on iOS, it allows users to update personal websites as easily as sending a text message. Its creator, Caleb Hailey, a 20-year tech veteran, recalls the internet's early promise where everyone owned their domain and published content, which social media disrupted.
Social Media's Historical Shift and the Absence of RSS
Social media's rise introduced condensed feeds, profiles, and interaction buttons. Hailey criticized Twitter's shift to algorithmic timelines and de-prioritization of links, leading him to uninstall social apps during the pandemic. He rediscovered Net NewsWire, an RSS reader, sparking the idea to merge RSS with social media interfaces.
Economic and Digital Transformation Perspective
As a free iOS app, HyperTexting has potential for broad adoption. However, Herd Works' plan to monetize via premium subscriptions or sponsored posts is crucial for sustainability. By offering an alternative to centralized platforms, it could reshape content creation and distribution. The app addresses the long-standing challenge of RSS readers failing to attract mainstream users since Google Reader's 2013 shutdown, potentially bridging the gap for both consumers and creators.