Julian Lloyd

Forums

Inrōp/inrokshitij

7h ago

What 20 months of building looks like :)

Hey PH
Kshitij here from Inr .
We launched here back in 2024, which gave us a real platform to kickstart our journey, and the feedback from this community has genuinely shaped how we built Inr . A lot has shipped since then, and we're back on Saturday, April 25, with our biggest update yet.
But before that, here's everything we shipped in these last few months -

  • Automation triggers: From 6 to 20+ trigger types. Posts, Reels, Stories, IG Live, mentions, inbound DMs, referral links, Meta ads, external webhooks, and more.

  • Automation actions: Grew from ~10 to 40+. You can now copy-paste blocks between scenarios, duplicate them, bulk-delete them, and share flows as templates. Plus, a simplified builder that makes getting started much faster.

  • Scheduling and retroactive automations: All your IG content in one place. Run automations on specific posts, schedule them for upcoming ones, or trigger them retroactively on comments up to 7 days old.

All of these combined mean that whether you run a simple comment-to-DM flow or a multi-step funnel for all of Instagram, we have you covered.

  • Campaigns: Multimedia sends, audience customization, scheduling, branching logic, and a full template library across industries so you're never starting from scratch.

  • CRM: Custom properties, 30+ filters to segment your audience, and insights like never before. All captured automatically, fully exportable, and connectable to your existing tools.

  • Safety and quality controls: Spam detection, hate comment filtering, viral comment moderation that adjusts as your post blows up, opt-out detection, manual interjection, folder exclusions, and time-of-day scheduling. The stuff that quietly saves you from yourself.

  • Integrations: Native connections with Shopify, Calendly, Stripe, and ElevenLabs. 8,000+ tools via Make and Zapier. Full private API, two-way webhooks, and an MCP server so you can run Inr from Claude or ChatGPT in plain language.

Launching today!

For anyone who want to support
https://www.producthunt.com/prod...

Rudra Bhairav

2d ago

We built a free, secure file transfer tool - would love your feedback

Hey Product Hunt community,

We just launched TransferSecure - a file transfer service that lets you send files up to 5 GB for free, no account needed on the recipient's end.

A few things we focused on that most transfer tools skip:

  • Every file up to 200MB is virus-scanned before the download link activates

  • Files are encrypted in transit and at rest

  • Links auto-expire and files are permanently deleted after expiry

  • No forced sign-ups - just verify your email and send

TinyCommand Live Session: Automating Real Use Cases

Most setups today use multiple tools:

Zapier or Make for workflows
Apollo or Clay for enrichment
Typeform or similar tools for forms

It works, but connecting everything takes effort and the system becomes harder to manage over time.

We re hosting a live TinyCommand session where we ll take a few real use cases and build them end-to-end in one place.

Satya Prakash

8d ago

We broke production with a one-line prompt change. Here's what we built after.

Last quarter one of our engineers made a small edit to a system prompt. Pushed it directly. No review, no history, nothing.

Within an hour our AI was responding to users with completely wrong answers.

We had no idea what changed. No diff to look at. No rollback button. Just three of us staring at the codebase trying to reverse-engineer a single line edit that had already been overwritten.

Four hours later we found it.

🔧 Tiny Chore Update

New update brings a few minor fixes. Mostly documentation and under-the-hood stuff.

Changed

  • Added books section to REFERENCE and README documenting directory structure, chapters, manuscript, and workflow.

  • Added Ctrl+M (compile manuscript) to the README keybindings table.

What's something you built that you thought was genius and nobody used?

Three months. Two developers. One feature nobody used.

I knew it was bad when I checked the analytics and saw that the only person who used it more than once was me. And even I stopped after the second week.

Here's how I knew it was a waste of time. Not in hindsight. In the moment. I just ignored the signs.

The first sign: I couldn't explain it in one sentence.