Edwin Klesman

Edwin Klesman

LINQ Me UpLINQ Me Up
A maker with a #valuefirst mindset
94 points

About

web/mobile app developer, consultant & mentor for hire, maker (currently 🚧 www.linqmeup.com)

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Maker History

  • Cursor Convo Export extension
    Cursor Convo Export extensionEffortlessly save & revive your Cursor AI chats
    Jan 2025
  • Focused Maker Music
    Focused Maker MusicAI-infused Focus Music for Makers & Online Entrepreneurs
    May 2024
  • LINQ Me Up
    LINQ Me UpBoost C# coding with AI-powered LINQ generation & Conversion
    Sep 2023
  • WashemTeaches kids (and adults) to properly wash their hands
    May 2020
  • StippeeCurated awesome products, right in your inbox
    Aug 2018

Forums

HTML export feature & exporting your Cursor chats remains useful

Hi there,
I wanted to make a good use of this cool forum feature that PH started providing for products, so let's start by sharing the last feature I've added to the extension, and some insights :)
HTML Export format available
Therefore, I wanted the 140+ people that have been welcoming the Cursor Convo Export extension to know that you can save your exports not only in Markdown (.md) format, but also as HTML.
To keep things simple, I made the HTML export available as a separate command (so you don't have to choose each time you want to export your chat):

I still use the export functionality every day, to keep documentation of interesting parts (removing whats irrelevant) or to keep save the context of what was used to create (parts of) products I'm working on.
Together with cursorrules and a Project Requirements Document (PRD) I've found that the Convo Export extension makes a good tool in my toolbox to save time and keep persistent and fail-safe coding on larger projects.
Exporting chats is still very useful
Even with the late features provided by Cursor AI - like being able to refer to other chats - it is useful to store your chats outside of the chat database that Cursor AI uses.
Too often I've been working on a large feature, only to learn an update or a crash or whatever made my chat disappear.
Keeping solid exports of a chat around, right after you "round up a smaller part working" and push the code to your feature/dev branch, makes a good practice to be able to see how things came about, and help the agent to get context when you want to use the same background info to add extra features etc.
Want to learn more tips about coding with AI in Cursor? Dive in and subscribe at https://www.aicodingtips.com

Abadesi

5yr ago

Register now for our first ever Makers virtual summit this July!

Exciting news, makers, we are hosting our first ever virtual summit this July and I would love to see you there! You can register for free here. Expect to hear from amazing individuals from the Product Hunt network: founders, investors, indie makers and individuals on the rise in their fields: from D2C to no code to blockchain and so much more. I'm in the process of inviting speakers and would love to hear from you - who do you want to hear from at the summit? What topics do you want us to cover?
Edwin Klesman

12mo ago

Is a Cursor extension a worthy item for a Product Hunt release?

As a maker, developer and AI enthousiast, I started working along with Cursor AI during development. This turned out to be a real productivity boost. One thing missed, though: the ability to save/export entire conversations (chats) that I had. After a while I started to notice the need for this to: 1 save (parts of a) conversation as documentation (deploy steps, related features, architectural decisions, ..) 2 use as input for a fresh chat when a (longer used/ long open) chat freezes (it doesn't react anymore. That's why I created and actively use (and recommend) the "Cursor Convo Export extension".
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