Twitter video to Markdown notes

Twitter Video to Markdown Notes

PostScribe turns public Twitter and X videos into transcript-backed notes you can move into Obsidian, Notion, Markdown files, or a content planning workflow. Paste a public post URL, generate the transcript, then copy or download a structured note.

A Twitter video to Markdown notes workflow turns the spoken content in a public Twitter or X video into a structured note. PostScribe creates the transcript and summary first, then gives you Markdown, Obsidian-friendly, and Notion-ready exports for research or content work.

Last updated: June 10, 2026

Public X + YouTube links
Transcript + summary
Markdown + Notion export

Output preview

Obsidian-ready research note

58 sec

Example source

https://youtu.be/market-brief

Example source

https://x.com/founder/status/205941...

Key quotes

"The clip is useful, but the note is the asset."

SummaryObsidian

# Product interview - saved from YouTube

why_saved:

Useful source for turning a public clip into a searchable note.

tags:

postscribe, social-video, research-note, obsidian

Start a note

Paste a public X/Twitter or YouTube video URL

Move social video into your knowledge base

Useful X videos often end up stuck in bookmarks, likes, or screenshots. A Markdown export turns the clip into a portable note with the source URL, summary, metadata, tags, why-saved context, and transcript. That makes it easier to file the clip beside the rest of your research instead of hunting for the original post later.

Obsidian and Markdown-friendly by default

PostScribe's Markdown export includes YAML frontmatter, tags, source metadata, original publish date when available, your reason for saving the clip, summary, and transcript text. It is designed for people who keep research in Markdown folders, Obsidian vaults, local notes, or version-controlled knowledge bases.

Notion-ready copy for teams and creators

Notion users can copy a cleaner Markdown format without YAML frontmatter and paste it into a page as headings and body text. That keeps the export lightweight while still making X video transcripts easier to use in briefs, planning docs, and content drafts.

Why trust PostScribe

Built for public links, clear limits, and transcript-first work.

PostScribe supports public X/Twitter and YouTube video links, keeps raw media temporary, and makes plan limits visible before purchase. The durable output is the transcript, summary, source URL, saved context, tags, and reusable text layer, not long-term storage of the original media.

Public links only

Private, restricted, deleted, unavailable, and unsupported posts fail clearly instead of being treated as valid sources.

Temporary raw media

Processing artifacts are not the product. PostScribe is designed around saved transcripts, summaries, notes, and source metadata.

Transparent limits

Guest, free, credit-pack, and monthly plans communicate available minutes and transcript memory before users pay.

No local file shuffle

Compared with desktop transcription workflows, PostScribe starts from the public post URL and returns useful text in the browser.

Related searches

More ways to use PostScribe

The same transcript-first workflow works across common social video research tasks. Use the pages below to jump between X video transcription, tweet video notes, text conversion, and summary workflows.

Can I export an X video transcript to Markdown?

Yes. Completed PostScribe transcript pages include Markdown copy and Markdown download actions, including source URL, summary, metadata, tags, why-saved context, and transcript text.

Does the Markdown export work with Obsidian?

Yes. The Markdown download is designed to fit an Obsidian-style vault with YAML frontmatter, useful tags, source metadata, why-saved context, summary, and transcript sections.

Can I send a transcript directly to Notion?

The first version does not use the Notion API. It provides Notion-ready Markdown copy that can be pasted into a Notion page as headings and body text.

Why use Markdown instead of only TXT?

TXT is useful for raw transcript text. Markdown is better when you want a reusable research note with headings, source metadata, tags, saved context, summary, and transcript content in one portable file.

Twitter Video to Markdown Notes | PostScribe