What is InterlinedList?

A hybrid writing tool and social feed — organize your thinking, then share it with people who care.

Lists

Build structured, hierarchical lists for anything — project tasks, reading queues, decision trees, research notes. Lists can be nested, tagged, and viewed as cards, grids, or tree diagrams.

Documents

Write long-form content alongside your lists. Documents live in the same workspace so your prose and your structure stay connected — no switching between separate apps.

Social feed

Share updates, link to your lists and documents, and follow people whose thinking you want to track. The feed surfaces content from people and organizations you care about.

How it fits together

Most writing tools are private by default. Most social tools are noisy by default. InterlinedList sits in between.

You capture and organize your thinking in lists and documents. When something is worth sharing, you post it to your feed. Followers see your updates, can engage with your content, and track your lists as they evolve over time.

Organizations give teams a shared space with the same tools — coordinated lists, shared documents, and a team feed without the chaos of generic chat.

Good for
  • Personal knowledge management
  • Research & writing projects
  • Team coordination
  • Following thinkers & creators
  • Building in public
Organizations

Create or join organizations to collaborate on shared lists and documents with a unified team feed.

People & followers

Follow individuals to see their public updates. Build an audience around your work.

Tags

Tag messages, lists, and items to slice across your content any way that makes sense to you.

Exports

Your data is yours. Export lists and documents whenever you need them.

Ready to get started?

Create a free account and start organizing your thinking today.

What does “interlined” mean?

The word comes from a typographical practice called interlineation: writing or inserting text between the existing lines of a document. Scribes, lawyers, and scholars used the gap between lines to annotate, correct, and elaborate without replacing the original text.

In this platform, your messages are the lines. Your lists, documents, and structured data are interlined within that stream — woven between the moments, not stored apart from them. Structure annotates the stream the same way a scribe’s pen annotated a manuscript page: precisely, in the gap, between the lines that prompted it.

The name is not marketing. It is a statement about the order of operations: write first, structure second.

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