hey @Designmodo - small collab idea on this. we could provide a simple way for designmodo to get a URL for every html design that's created, meant for internal reviews/feedback within teams behind secure company authentication with @slashdisplay.
core idea is simple:
- user shares URL with teammates
- teammates leave in-line comments
- agent/user can edit the email and build a new version
- a fully free version available with claimable URLs
what do you think?
hey founders.
AI produces artifacts that include sensitive info.
how do you share them securely with teammates?
you need to check out https://t.co/OMKsh097he immediately
I created a HTML presentation that looks great full-screen with the /slides skill, published with https://t.co/N9oGdD2Cg9
The way HTML brings human-facing docs to life is fantastic.
Agents produce these types of artifacts continuously, what's been missing is a simple way to share and collaborate on anything sensitive with teammates, and Display plugs that gap.
One URL behind company auth, human-agent feedback loop via comments, and updated versions published on the same link
If you create presentations with agents, you should use the /slides skill. Genuinely underrated – makes Claude Code presentations genuinely better for viewers.
I've struggled with full-screen viewability and this solves it with ease. Created one for https://t.co/N9oGdD2Cg9 in minutes, and looks awesome.
/slides is such a great skill. Just created a beautiful product deck for @slashdisplay in just minutes – it looks amazing from the get-go.
The deck: https://t.co/57Nu2irzG0
Never manually create slides again.
Here's a quick video showing how you can use my /slides skill to create a beautiful animated presentation in minutes.
HTML really is the solution to everything.
📌 Watch the full tutorial here: https://t.co/3Ro4SA17lC
@petergyang Hey Peter! I have a suggestion on how to improve team collaboration on this with gated URLs, inline comments and agent resolution. Dropped you a dm about https://t.co/OMKsh097he
I drive an electric car but I don't really get the strategic vision for why Ferrari or Lambo would create one.
All electric cars accelerate fast, some even handle well, but that's not why people buy incredibly expensive supercars. Ferrari stands for style and elegance in a literal stallion. Lambo stands for pure, unadulterated testosterone. They're niche luxury products, they don't need to be electric.
yes – HTML really is perfect for slides. many are sensitive (board decks, investor decks, strategy, pricing), so the page needs to sit behind your company auth.
with https://t.co/N9oGdD2Cg9 that's one command in your agent – permanent URL, only your team opens it, versions tracked as you edit.
@paraschopra@utsengar git pages requires everyone to have github accounts, which isn't often the case with non-technical users (pms, designers, commercial).
it can get expensive - eg @slashdisplay has one flat price per org, scales better.
@RoundtableSpace my dude - there's a solution with permanent URLs and team collaboration available both as a tool and skill.
https://t.co/OMKsh097he puts gives agent-generated html permanent URLs behind company auth (sensitive data stays private).
you leave in-line comments -> agent updates.
Your team uses agents.
Agents generate lots of docs – plans, reports, specs, dashboards.
Most of that output is sensitive and internal.
So how do you share it with teammates securely?
https://t.co/LvSVrl2bbw gives a URL for everything your agents ships.
Behind company auth.
Teammates login with via SSO or OTP and leave in-line comments. Agents act on them, resolving the comments and creating updated versions.
@pcshipp@moonrank_ai you have lots of tips likely then - simply start searching for relevant posts that outline their issues with learning/what they struggle with and answer sincerely. don't plug.
I think I've fully hacked the art of product images for banners - I simply ask Claude Code to create the images directly in the app repo.
It pulls the app design, adds mock data, saves as .png – it's pixel perfect, I don't need to create/edit dummy data in Figma, and it's always in the right format.
the HTML output is the underrated half of this. the part that's still clunky is the handoff – most of your examples (finances, medical, paperwork) are private, so you can't just drop the page somewhere public to share it.
what's worked for us: have the agent publish it to a gated URL in the same step, so it's shareable the second it exists.
(that handoff is basically why we built https://t.co/N9oGdD3a5H - puts it all behind company auth Google/MS SSO)