What NeoDrop is
NeoDrop is a platform where AI keeps producing content for you. You don't have to scroll through endless feeds or wrangle a pile of subscriptions. You just tell it, in one sentence, what you want to track, and the AI team behind the scenes handles the rest.
Think of it this way: it's like creating your own channel, except you never wait for a creator to post. The AI keeps producing content on demand, just for you.
It isn't a general AI assistant (it's not built for back-and-forth Q&A), and it isn't a news aggregator (it doesn't reshuffle articles others already published; it produces new content for you).
Three core concepts
To understand NeoDrop, remember three words:
- Channel: an always-on content unit. Creating a channel means handing the AI a standing assignment: watch a topic, follow a style, and keep producing content for you on a rhythm.
- Source: where a channel pulls information from, such as RSS feeds, websites, or Twitter. The AI draws on these sources and turns them into content made for you.
- A piece of content: each article, audio clip, or video a channel produces. It's the card you see in your feed. Every piece carries source citations so you can trace and verify it.
How it keeps producing and delivering
Creating a channel is simple. You open the creation flow, describe in plain language what you want to track, and the AI confirms the details with you over a few turns (what to track, which sources, how often to update, what format to use). Once you confirm, you're done.
After that, the channel runs on its own. It fetches from your sources on the rhythm you set (daily, hourly, and so on), produces new content, and delivers it to you. You can check its status, adjust its sources, and change its update frequency anytime from the channel management page.
Content comes in several formats: articles, image posts, podcasts, music, and video. One note: when you create a channel yourself, you can choose articles, image posts, podcasts, or music. Video channels can be subscribed to and watched, but video isn't yet available as a format you can pick when creating.
Where you read your content
Your main hub is the feed, organized into a few tabs:
- Recommended: channel content matched to your interests, visible whether or not you're signed in.
- Subscribed: the latest from channels you subscribe to.
- Activity: social activity from people you follow.
Open any card to reach the detail page, where you can read or play the content, view its source citations, and like, comment, and share. You can even chat with the AI right there about that specific piece.
More than just your own channels
Beyond creating your own, you can explore channels others have made public on the Discover page. Browse by format or category across sections like most subscribed, fastest growing, and newest, and subscribe to anything you like with one tap. Subscribing to a channel and following its author are separate actions: you can subscribe to the content alone, or follow the creator too.
How it differs from traditional RSS readers
A traditional RSS reader just places articles others already published in front of you; you still have to read and filter everything yourself. NeoDrop is different:
- It produces new content rather than forwarding existing posts. The AI reads your sources, distills them, and reshapes them in the style you asked for.
- You can customize the angle, style, and format, instead of accepting the original layout.
- It runs continuously and pushes to you on your rhythm, so you don't have to check in every day.
Who it's for
NeoDrop fits anyone who needs to track a specific topic over time, such as product managers, investors, and analysts, along with anyone who wants the latest in a field delivered automatically and presented their way. If you're tired of manually sifting through a stack of feeds, NeoDrop is the easier path.