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GuideChapter III · Ship

How to ship

A project stuck on your laptop helps no one. Shipping means putting it on the internet with a link you can actually send someone. It's far less scary than it sounds — you can do it for free, in minutes.

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Age of AGICommunity guide · Chapter III of IV

“Done enough to share” beats perfect

Your first version will be rough. Ship it anyway. You learn more from one thing that's live and real than from ten things half-built on your machine. Perfect is just a nicer word for never.

Push to GitHub, deploy from there

Put your code on GitHub and connect it to a host. It goes live, and every time you push an update it redeploys automatically. No FTP, no servers to babysit.

You learn more from one thing that's live than ten things half-built on your laptop.

— Age of AGI

Pick a free host

Vercel is great for JavaScript / Next.js apps. Netlify is great for static sites and even has drag-and-drop. Both have generous free tiers and hand you a real URL you can share today.

Write a tiny README

One short paragraph on what it is, a screenshot, and the live link. That's it. This is what people — and future employers — actually read first.

Then say it out loud

Drop your live link in the Age of AGI chat or demo it at Ship & Tell. Real eyes and honest feedback are how the next version gets better. Shipping in silence is half the work.

Stuck on this chapter? You don't have to figure it out alone.

Bring your question to a build night, or just ask in the room.

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