Turn Chaotic Subscriptions
Into a Learning Flow
Tube Flow is a YouTube RSS reader centered on subscription grouping. Say goodbye to information noise and take control of your learning path.
Next.js 15 Full Stack Tutorial
OpenAI Sora Technical Analysis
Rust Memory Management Deep Dive
Three Body Anime: True Sci-Fi
The Problem Isn't Lack of Content on YouTube
It's that your subscription list is too long and messy, making you forget why you subscribed in the first place.
Unstructured Subscriptions
Subscribed to 200+ channels, tech, entertainment, and news all mixed together. Every time you open it, you only see algorithm recommendations, can't find the hardcore content you really want to learn.
No Systematic Learning
Want to learn AI development, but get distracted by entertainment videos. Can't efficiently use fragmented time, Watch Later list becomes Never Watch.
Information Noise
Algorithms always recommend what you "like to watch", not what you "need to watch". You need a tool to actively filter noise and get back to the content itself.
Redefine Your Reading Flow
Subscription Grouping (Category)
This is the core of Tube Flow. No more hodgepodge, but categorize channels into specific "learning topics". Only want to watch Web development today? One click to switch, world becomes peaceful.
- Custom category labels and colors
- Each channel belongs to one main category
- Category-based timeline filtering
Pure Timeline
No Shorts, no community posts, no algorithm recommendations. Only video updates from channels you've subscribed to, sorted by time in reverse order.
Built for Learning-Oriented Users
Deep Topic Learning
On a weekend afternoon, you just want to dive into "React Source Code". Switch to the frontend category, filter out all irrelevant content, and enter a flow state.
Clear Fragmented Time
On your commute, quickly browse the "Unread" list. Mark interesting ones as "Later", mark uninteresting ones as "Read" with one click.
Build Knowledge Base
Good tutorials encountered no longer get lost in history. Add to "Favorites" and build your own video knowledge base.