Guides
Grow on X without losing your voice
Practical guides on staying consistent on X, building in public, and using AI to draft in your voice, from the team building Torbit.
- X growth for founders, without the daily grindHow founders stay consistent on X when shipping is the day job: a feed-to-draft loop that writes in your voice and posts only on your approval.
- X growth for indie hackers, before you have a productIndie hackers who build an audience before they launch start from a base, not zero. How to grow on X while you ship, in your own voice.
- X growth for developers and DevRelDev Twitter is a professional network: CTOs and hiring managers read it. How engineers and DevRel build a name on X without it eating their week.
- How to build in public on X, as a habitBuild-in-public works when it's a habit, not a campaign. A repeatable loop for turning the work you're already doing into posts that compound.
- An AI ghostwriter for X that sounds like youMost AI writing reads like AI. What it takes for drafts to actually sound like you, and why an approval step matters more than raw generation.
- X growth tools that don't auto-postAuto-posting trades your judgment for volume and puts your account at risk. The case for a human approval step, and how the approve/reject loop works.
- An AI tweet writer that sounds like you (and never auto-posts)Torbit is an AI tweet writer and AI X post generator that drafts in your voice from real, recent threads, then waits for your approval. Nothing posts on its own.
- Turn Reddit, Hacker News, and Google News into tweetsTorbit watches Reddit, Hacker News, and Google News in your niche and drafts X posts off what is actually moving, so you always have something real to post about.
- An AI Twitter ghostwriter for founders and developersAn AI Twitter ghostwriter for founders, indie hackers, and developers: drafts X posts in your voice from your niche's news, and posts only what you approve.
- Best AI tweet writers in 2026, compared by how they postHow the main AI tweet writers in 2026 compare (Typefully, Hypefury, Tweet Hunter, OpenTweet, Buffer, and more): where post ideas come from, whose voice they write in, and who approves before anything posts.