Web app: https://t.co/bD3LUdkaN7
Mobile waitlist: https://t.co/7Lr7P1blEK
No parent should have to choose which memory to delete just to free up space. RT if that resonates.
Inside the app (after login) there's a feedback page: https://t.co/88E9TDtnRG. Suggest features. Report bugs. Tell me what to kill. I'm building this in the open.
For devs: there's a clean API so you can plug compression, splitting, and merging into your own apps without dealing with heavy media-processing infrastructure. Login and leave a feature request.
https://t.co/SBUWZ0sjK5
Today DocuLyte does three things really well: → Compress (photos, videos, documents) → Split large videos into multi-parts -> compress -> merge the compressed videos. Webapp is live: https://t.co/bD3LUdkaN7
Yes, files are uploaded for processing. No, we don't store anything. Files are processed and discarded. You get the benefit of powerful compression without your videos living on someone else's server.
I had multiple 8 GB videos of my kid's basketball games on my phone, in the cloud, and on my laptop. I didn't want to delete them. I didn't want to keep paying for storage either. So I built something.#buildinpublic#indiehackers#mompreneur#devtools
Doculyte, a document and media toolkit focused on fast processing and user privacy. First feature: compress an 8 GB video down to 300 MB without noticeable quality loss. Then splitting. Then merging. Then an API.