Working on a project in GitLawb?
I built GitQR, a simple tool that turns your project link into a QR code instantly.
Why use it?
- Share your GitHub/GitLab/demo links faster
- Add QR codes to portfolios, presentations, posters, or events
- Make your projects easier for others to open and explore
- No long URLs, just scan & access
Paste link → Generate QR → Share project.
Trying to make project sharing easier for builders and open-source communities.
Give it a try and tell me what features you’d want next
Hey builders 👋
I’ve been experimenting with a small project called GitQR — a simple tool that instantly turns links into QR codes for easier project sharing.
Useful for:
•sharing GitHub/GitLab repos
•demo apps
•portfolios
•docs & presentations
•community events
Paste link → Generate QR → Share instantly.
Built with inspiration from the growing builder culture around Base & GitLawb 🚀
Would love feedback from fellow SEA builders on what features could make this more useful.
Try now : https://t.co/eGE6AJzARx
Working on a project in GitLawb?
I built GitQR, a simple tool that turns your project link into a QR code instantly.
Why use it?
- Share your GitHub/GitLab/demo links faster
- Add QR codes to portfolios, presentations, posters, or events
- Make your projects easier for others to open and explore
- No long URLs, just scan & access
Paste link → Generate QR → Share project.
Trying to make project sharing easier for builders and open-source communities.
Give it a try and tell me what features you’d want next
Working on a project in GitLawb?
I built GitQR, a simple tool that turns your project link into a QR code instantly.
Why use it?
- Share your GitHub/GitLab/demo links faster
- Add QR codes to portfolios, presentations, posters, or events
- Make your projects easier for others to open and explore
- No long URLs, just scan & access
Paste link → Generate QR → Share project.
Trying to make project sharing easier for builders and open-source communities.
Give it a try and tell me what features you’d want next
@kevincodex Pretty interesting seeing autonomous systems continue adapting without constant manual intervention.
The idea of agents evolving from signals and potentially connecting directly to trading infrastructure feels like a glimpse into where AI + onchain systems are heading.
Feels like agents having wallets will become as normal as apps having accounts.
Interesting to watch the shift from AI tools → AI agents → AI agents with ownership and transactions.
Meanwhile builders just keep experimenting with new tools around this wave. Been building small things myself too
Working on a project in GitLawb?
I built GitQR, a simple tool that turns your project link into a QR code instantly.
Why use it?
- Share your GitHub/GitLab/demo links faster
- Add QR codes to portfolios, presentations, posters, or events
- Make your projects easier for others to open and explore
- No long URLs, just scan & access
Paste link → Generate QR → Share project.
Trying to make project sharing easier for builders and open-source communities.
Give it a try and tell me what features you’d want next
Feels like we’re entering a phase where AI agents are becoming a core layer, not just a feature and @base seems to be moving in that direction quickly.
Less manual workflows.
More autonomous execution. More builders shipping faster.
The question is no longer:
“Can AI help build?”
It’s becoming: “How much can AI build on its own?”
Seeing this shift honestly pushed me to experiment and build small tools too. Currently working on GitQR, trying to make sharing projects simpler.
Curious where AI agents on Base take builders over the next year
220K+ visits says a lot, builders clearly want places where they can experiment and ship fast
Playground honestly pushed me to start building small tools too (currently experimenting with GitQR).
@gitlawb what kind of builder tools do you think the GitLawb ecosystem still needs most right now?
https://t.co/sBjJlzXoyY
@gitlawb@base Exciting to see the Base building continue with Playground × Base MCP
Curious. how do you see integrations like this shaping the future of GitLawb Playground? Could MCP become an important layer for helping builders move from experimenting to shipping faster?