About WallaWhats
WallaWhats turns the X (Twitter) accounts you care about into instant WhatsApp alerts. Pick the accounts, and every new post reaches you within seconds — decided by your choice, not by X's feed or notification algorithm.
What we make
You choose the X accounts worth watching — reporters, competitors, market movers, the tools you depend on. WallaWhats watches them on a filtered real-time stream and delivers each new post to your WhatsApp seconds after it goes live. Tweet snapshots, delivery history, and velocity caps that batch alert storms into a digest are included on every plan, free tier included.
Why it exists
On X you don't decide what reaches you — the algorithm does. It reorders your feed for engagement, and even its own notifications get throttled, batched, or buried, so posts you actually wanted to see slip past. Most people don't want the feed; they want the handful of accounts that matter, the moment those accounts post. WallaWhats is that: a deterministic alert for every post from the accounts you pick — no ranking, no throttling — delivered to the messaging app you already keep open.
Who runs it
WallaWhats is built and operated by the team at Blockchain Web Services (BWS), with Nacho Coll as principal. BWS is an AI-native solutions factory that ships production-ready software across a portfolio of products — WallaWhats is one of them, alongside OpenAgile.AI, Zellbox, Badges.ninja, Blockchain Database, NFT.zK, Telegram XBot, and IPFS.NINJA. The operating principle is Demand Becomes Product: engineered by people, accelerated by AI, accountable end-to-end — every line of code owned by a named engineer.
The founding team has been building on AWS since 2007 (Enterprise Architect work for LEGO, Nordea, Vueling and others) and on real-time and messaging infrastructure since 2019. WallaWhats launched in 2026 because the accounts most people actually follow X for get drowned out by the feed — and no simple tool existed to turn "tell me when this account posts" into a message on the app you already check.
How we use AI in our content
Our blog articles are drafted with the help of an AI assistant using our editorial workflow, then reviewed and approved by a human before publishing. Every product claim — plans, limits, and how alerts are delivered — is checked against the live WallaWhats service. AI helps us cover more topics, faster; a person is always accountable for what ships. This mirrors Google's helpful-content guidance that content should be helpful, reliable, and people-first regardless of how it's produced.
Reach us
Questions, corrections, or press: email support@wallawhats.com, or find us on X at @XWallaWhats. Spotted an inaccuracy in an article? Tell us and we'll fix it.
Editorial standards
- Every product number is verified against the live service before publishing.
- Every article is human-reviewed and carries a named author.
- We correct mistakes when they're reported, and note material updates.