u/Any_Inspection6351

Built a developer portfolio tool that updates itself. No more outdated portfolio sites

The reason most developer portfolios are outdated is simple. Maintaining them manually is a low priority chore that always loses to actual building.

Friqta fixes this by making the portfolio automatic. Connect GitHub once and your public profile at friqta.com/yourname updates every 24 hours on its own. Projects shipped, commit streaks, builder score, coding hours, all pulled from your existing GitHub activity.

You just keep building. The profile keeps up.

Launched a few months ago and would love feedback from founders and technical builders here.

friqta.com

reddit.com
u/Any_Inspection6351 — 2 days ago

Built a tool for developers who are tired of explaining what they've built

If you're a technical founder or developer you've felt this. Someone asks what you've been working on and you fumble through an answer that doesn't do justice to what you've actually shipped.

Friqta fixes that with one link.

Connect your GitHub and get a public profile at friqta.com/yourname that shows your project history, commit streaks, builder score, coding hours, and a project graph of your entire repo ecosystem. All pulled automatically from your existing work.

No manual input. No maintaining a portfolio site. Just a clean, always-updated profile you can send in any context from client pitches to investor conversations.

Launched a few months ago and would love feedback from founders and builders here.

friqta.com

reddit.com
u/Any_Inspection6351 — 2 days ago

I got tired of my GitHub profile communicating nothing so I built something better

Every time I sent my GitHub to a client or added it to an application I felt a little embarrassed. A green square graph and a list of repo names. It meant nothing to anyone outside of engineering.

So I built Friqta.

You connect GitHub once. It generates a public profile at friqta.com/yourname showing everything that actually matters: projects shipped, commit streaks, coding hours, builder score, and a project graph visualizing your entire repo ecosystem.

It updates automatically every 24 hours. You just keep building and the profile reflects it.

Been using it myself for a few months and it has changed how I share my work in professional contexts. Happy to get feedback from this community.

friqta.com

reddit.com
u/Any_Inspection6351 — 2 days ago

I built a tool that turns your GitHub history into a portfolio you're proud to share

Been working on this for a few months and finally feel good enough about it to share here.

Friqta connects to your GitHub once and automatically generates a public developer profile at friqta.com/yourname. It shows your projects shipped, commit streaks, coding hours, builder score, and peak productivity windows, all in a format that actually makes sense to someone who isn't reading your code.

No manual updating. No curating repos. It pulls from what you're already doing and presents it cleanly.

The free tier covers most of it. Would love feedback from this community especially since a lot of you are actively building and shipping things that deserve to be seen.

Link: friqta.com

What's your builder score?

reddit.com
u/Any_Inspection6351 — 3 days ago

Most builders ship constantly but have nothing to show for it.

Most builders I know ship constantly but have nothing to show for it. Not because they aren't productive, just because GitHub profiles are terrible at communicating progress to anyone outside of engineering. A raw commit graph doesn't tell a story. If you want people to actually understand what you've built, you need something that translates your work into something readable. That's what I ended up solving for myself with friqta.com Curious if anyone else has felt this gap.

reddit.com
u/Any_Inspection6351 — 5 days ago

I built a tool that turns your GitHub commit history into a portfolio you'd actually want to share.

I kept running into the same problem. I'd apply for a job or reach out to a client and they'd ask for a portfolio. I'd send my GitHub profile and immediately feel embarrassed. It looks like a graveyard of half-finished repos and weirdly inconsistent commit graphs.

So I built Friqta.

You connect GitHub once and it automatically generates a public developer profile at friqta.com/yourname, a Builder Score based on your activity, commit streaks, coding hours, peak flow hours, a contribution heatmap, and a project graph you can actually share.

It pulls everything from your existing history and updates on its own. No manual input, no writing anything from scratch. Your work is already there, Friqta just makes it visible.

I launched it a few weeks ago and wanted to share here since this community gets what it's like to ship something and then have nothing to show people that actually looks good.

reddit.com
u/Any_Inspection6351 — 5 days ago