Cursor builds inside your repo, so the thing you made only runs where the repo is: your machine, your dev server, your terminal. The moment someone wants to look, the choices get heavy — stand up a deploy, or hand over the project and talk them through clone, install, and run. You wanted neither. Run your build the way you already do, drop the output here, and get a private link in seconds. It opens in any browser, with no sign-in and no access to your code.
Try it now
Drop a file — get a private link in seconds. No sign-up.
Drop an HTML file or ZIP bundle, or click to choose.
Single file or ZIP. Max 3 MB.
Up to 3 MB, link self-destructs after 7 days. Sign up free to keep links forever, password-protect them, and store more.
Run your build in Cursor's terminal the way you already do — or save a single self-contained HTML file. Zip the output folder it produces (your dist or out directory). That bundle is everything the browser needs; the repo Cursor edits never leaves your machine.
Drop the file or ZIP in and get a private link in seconds. The page runs in the browser with its JavaScript, CSS, and libraries intact — no deploy pipeline, no Node server, no env to configure.
Send the one link to whoever needs it. They open it in a browser without an account and without touching your repo. Re-prompt in Cursor, rebuild, replace the file, and the link stays the same — they always land on your newest build.
Run your build, then zip the output folder it produces — or save a single self-contained HTML file — and drop it in. You get a private, unguessable link in seconds that runs the page in any browser. No deploy step, no dev server to keep running, no hosting to configure. The link is the handoff.
No. They open one link in a browser — no clone, no install, no dev server, no account. They see the working build, not the project Cursor edits. Your code and your local environment stay on your machine.
miinideck serves the static, front-end slice — the HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and assets that run in the browser. If your build needs a live server, API routes, or a database behind it, that part needs a real host: Vercel and Netlify are the right tools for a full-stack deploy. Plenty of Cursor builds are front-end only, or have a UI you can hand off on its own — that part drops in here and shares as a link.
Yes. Turn on Review and anyone with the link can pin a comment to the exact element they mean — no account needed. You resolve each note as you go. Review is free on every plan; on Studio you can also export the whole thread as a prompt to paste straight back into Cursor.
Private by default. The URL is unguessable and no-indexed, so it won't surface in search and only the people you send it to can open it. Add a password or an expiry on top — free on every plan.
No card to try, no sign-up to get a link. Sign up free to keep links forever, password-protect them, and store more.