February 16, 2026

Why Your Farcaster Threads Deserve a Permanent Home

By jrf

Try to find a thread you wrote three months ago. Not a recent one — one from deep in the scroll. Something you spent real time on. Something people engaged with.

You probably can’t. And if you can, it took you far too long.

This is not a Farcaster problem. It is a Feed problem.

The Feed is a River, Not a Library

Every social platform is optimized for the same thing: the new. Your Farcaster profile shows your most recent casts. Everything before that is archaeology.

The data exists in the protocol — that is one of the beautiful things about Farcaster. But the interface buries it. Your profile is a reverse-chronological scroll that works against you the more you post.

The result: your most thoughtful, high-signal writing is the hardest to find. A quick reply from yesterday sits above a 12-part thread from last month that took you two hours to write.

You Are Not a Username. You Are a Body of Work.

Here is something most people do not realize until they see it: you have produced an enormous amount of structured thought.

Your 500+ casts are not “social media posts.” They are the distributed draft of your intellectual autobiography. Hot takes on governance. Nuanced breakdowns of protocol design. The joke you made at 2 AM that accidentally captured something real about your worldview.

We built a free tool that scans your last 1,000 casts and distills them into a high-signal knowledge graph. It does not just dump a raw feed — it filters for your strongest thinking and organizes it by theme. Try it. What comes back will surprise you.

When you see your ideas organized by signal instead of by time — the patterns in your thinking, the threads that connect — something shifts. You realize this is not disposable content. This is your body of work.

From Snapshot to Living Archive

A knowledge graph export is step one. But it is still a snapshot of today. Tomorrow you will post again, and it will be out of date.

What if that graph updated itself every time you posted?

What if it grew smarter over time — connecting new ideas to old ones, surfacing relationships you did not see yourself? And lived at a URL you owned — not at the mercy of any platform’s roadmap?

That is what Marqui does. It watches you live your digital life, filters for signal, rescues your best thinking from the timeline, and publishes it to a living homepage that never needs updating.

Your ideas deserve more than a 24-hour half-life. They deserve a permanent home.


Try the free Knowledge Graph tool. See the shape of your thinking. Then decide if it deserves a permanent home.