Launching today

ReleasePilot
Turn GitHub commits into AI-powered release notes
8 followers
Turn GitHub commits into AI-powered release notes
8 followers
ReleasePilot automatically transforms GitHub commits into professional, customer-friendly release notes using AI. Connect your repository, generate polished changelogs in seconds, and publish beautiful release pages without writing release notes manually. Perfect for indie hackers, startups, and software teams.





Finally something that fixes the "git log --oneline" copy-paste chaos I've been doing for years. Hooked it up to a side project repo and it pulled out a clean changelog in one click.
@seherarvs Thank you Seher! That "git log --oneline" copy-paste
workflow was exactly what I was trying to kill.
Really glad it worked smoothly on your first try.
Would love to hear what features would make it even
more useful for your workflow!
Connected a side project repo and the auto-generated changelog actually read like something I'd want to ship to users, not a raw commit dump. Saved me from dreading release day.
@beyza245588 "Dreading release day" — that's exactly the feeling
I built this to eliminate. Really happy it produced
something you'd actually want to ship to users.
That's the whole goal — output that reads like a
human wrote it, not a git log dump.
Thanks for trying it out Beyza!
Plugged in a repo and the changelog came out clean and actually readable, which is more than I can say for most tools like this. The auto-publishing page is a nice touch too.
@kazmsobalaql Thank you Kazim! Really glad the output was clean and readable —
that was the hardest part to get right.
The auto-publishing page was something I felt was missing from
other tools too.
Would love to know — what would make it even more useful for your workflow?
Love how it pulls straight from commit messages without forcing you to format anything differently. The auto-generated release pages look genuinely polished, not like the usual AI slop.
@erdi194741 Thank you Erdi! "Not like the usual AI slop" is honestly
the best compliment I could get.
That was my biggest concern when building it — making sure
the output actually sounds human and useful, not generic.
What kind of projects are you using it on?