Tired of sharing localhost links or screenshots of your Claude-generated code? Display.dev lets you publish agent artifacts behind company auth with one command.

What's up, fellow code monkeys? If you've been riding the AI wave recently, you've definitely hit this annoying roadblock: your shiny new AI agent spits out a gorgeous HTML UI, but sharing it with your non-tech PM is an absolute nightmare. Screenshots? Lame. Sending raw HTML files? They'll just ask "why is the text so weird?". And setting up a whole deployment pipeline just to show a draft is a waste of time.
Ott, the co-founder of display.dev, got sick of this exact bs. His buddy Carl was spamming Claude Code, generating dope spec sheets and interactive plans. But sharing them on Slack was a clown show of screenshots and localhost struggles.
So, they built display.dev. The pitch is dead simple: one command publishes your agent-generated HTML/Markdown straight to a permanent URL, securely locked behind your company's SSO (Google, Microsoft, or OTP).
No need to pay Vercel's ridiculous $320/month enterprise tax. Your team logs in and sees the artifact exactly as the agent built it.
The gigabrain feature? Teammates can leave inline comments, and your agents can natively read them to update the code. That's some next-level automation. Plus, you get audit logs to catch execs lying about not seeing your reports, and agents can even publish unauthenticated using simple curl commands.
With a solid 86 upvotes on Product Hunt, the crowd is validating the pain point.
One user practically yelled, "Awesome that someone finally built this!" And honestly, they're not wrong. Anyone who builds heavily with ai tools hits this wall sooner or later.
Is it just another AI-adjacent SaaS? Maybe. Is it incredibly useful? Absolutely.
The takeaway for you aspiring Indie Hackers: stop trying to build the next Facebook. Find a dev workflow that makes you swear at your monitor every day, build a tiny wrapper/tool to fix it, slap some corporate auth on it, and charge a flat fee.
Just remember to double-check where your company data is going before you pipe it all through an agent, unless you enjoy explaining data breaches to legal.
Source: Product Hunt