Portify: Generate a developer portfolio from your GitHub
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Portify — From Commits to Career Live portfolios from real GitHub activity From Commits to Career Portify reads your GitHub history and turns it into a narrative: projects, tech stack, evolution graphs, and a timeline you'd actually share in a job application. Sign in with GitHub Explore a sample portfolio Works with any public GitHub profile No writing prompts or manual case studies Your portfolio portify.com/your-name Live from GitHub your-name TypeScript · Next.js · Open Source Auto-updates as you push Contributions, languages & journey Demo Contributions over time Languages Developer journey Key moments Joined GitHub 2018 • @yourname Shipped Portify TypeScript · Next.js · Postgres First OSS PR merged Shows up on your public timeline How Portify works Three quick steps from raw GitHub activity to a portfolio link you're not embarrassed to share. 1 Connect GitHub Pick the repos that represent you Sign in with GitHub and choose a handful of projects. Portify reads commits, languages, and metadata. 2 Generate Portify builds the narrative for you We write repo summaries, detect stacks, build graphs, and stitch it into a single page that feels like a personal landing, not a CV. With the ability to add your own edits to the portfolio. 3 Share & forget Share one URL that stays fresh You get a clean slug (like /yourname ) you can drop into applications, DMs, and bios while Portify quietly keeps it in sync. What Portify gives you, beyond a link tree Instead of sending people to raw GitHub profiles or Notion docs, you get a single URL that shows your work, how you build, and how it's evolved. Project stories Readable repo summaries Each project gets a human-length description and tech stack badges, so people can actually skim what you've built. Visual context Screenshots & diagrams Attach UI screenshots and Mermaid diagrams so your portfolio feels like a product, not just a list. Signal over noise Evolution & languages See how your commits, languages, and key repos change over time, pulled straight from GitHub.