Twitter’s search functionality has been a point of concern in the past, with users complaining that it didn’t work as extensively as they needed it to, and that there shouldn’t be a cap on how far back one could search. While Twitter did revamp their search feature, this update sometimes causes the opposite problem of gathering too many tweets to reliably find what you are searching.

This can be especially frustrating if you know for sure that the content exists, such as content that you tweeted yourself. Well, startup Kifi can help! Kifi has a solution to this specific problem: by automatically saving all your tweeted links, Kifi creates a personalized search engine out of them.

However, Kifi is not simply an index of your own content. After analyzing all your tweets, the service recommends links and content that it deems similar to what you’ve sent out, similar to the related videos function on YouTube. Additionally, Kifi tracks and charts other users who share the same type of content. “It’s essentially an interest graph plus a people graph and a topic graph all integrated together,” says Yoshitake, Kifi’s VP of Product referring to the ways it puts all collected data together.

Kifi offers browser integration, as well as iOS and Android apps. Check it out here!

For in-depth coverage, visit TechCrunch.