Every link-in-bio tool was built for the same person — someone optimizing their feed for engagement. That's a real audience. It's just not our audience.
When someone clicks the link in your Twitter bio, they're asking one question: who are you, and what are you working on right now?
They don't want a menu of links. They want context. They want to know if you ship.
You shipped twice this week. Your bio still says you're “working on something new.” You've got three projects in three states and a Linktree with one outdated link.
This isn't laziness. It's the wrong tool. Bio pages should follow the work, not the other way around.
We borrowed our visual grammar from the deploy dashboards we already live in. Green dot means live. Amber means beta. Grey means idea. A version number means progress. A timestamp means trust.
Builders don't need a curated grid. They need a clear signal of what ships, what's cooking, and what's next.
The hardest part of any “keep your bio updated” system is the human in the loop. We removed that.
When you push a commit, your agent sees it. When you publish, your bio surfaces it. When a project goes live, the dot turns green. You don't log in to update a bio page. You build.
You won't find “empower”, “seamless”, or “supercharge” on this site. You won't see follower counts treated as identity. You won't see badges that try to make you feel important.
The work is the brand. We just give it a place to live.
That's the entire pitch. Your projects. Your status. Your stack. One page. Always current.
Linktree is a menu. lots.bio is a presence.