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Most URL shorteners send your traffic through someone else's servers
or bloat your database. URLnip does neither.
Lives inside WordPress. Single JSON file. Clean short links under
your own domain.
Free: create, edit, delete, click tracking, CSV export, live search,
bulk delete, one-click copy.
PRO adds: bulk import and counter resets.
No accounts. No API keys. No monthly fees.

The 9 Dollar URLnipOwn your short links — no bit.ly, no bloat, no BS.
Mikeleft a comment
So Claude Code can now babysit your PRs overnight without your laptop staying open. For on-call engineers drowning in repetitive triage, that's not a small thing. Curious how the 15 daily routine limit holds up for bigger teams in practice. 🤔

Claude Code RoutinesPut Claude Code tasks on autopilot with smart routines
Mikeleft a comment
Hey Product Hunt 👋 I built URLnip because every URL shortener I tried had at least one of these problems: ❌ Your links live on someone else's servers (bye, bit.ly) ❌ Installs three database tables for what's basically a lookup table ❌ Requires an account / subscription just to shorten a link ❌ Overkill complexity for a simple redirect URLnip does one thing: creates short links under your own...

The 9 Dollar URLnipOwn your short links — no bit.ly, no bloat, no BS.
Mikeleft a comment
The gap between "working prototype" and "software your business actually runs on" is where most no-code tools quietly give up. That's the right problem to go after. Netflix and Google as reference customers is a bold flex though — would love to see some small business examples too. 👀

Softr AI Co-BuilderBuild business apps with AI - that actually work
Mikeleft a comment
"Quality service, customer-first approach" — yeah, we've all seen that on every generated site ever. Pulling real review patterns instead is a solid idea. Will be interesting to see how well it works for niche businesses with fewer reviews. 👀

BrilaOne-page websites from real Google Maps reviews
