What was that app built with, again?

Keep a record of the stack behind everything you ship — then give it a link people can actually read. Your logins and your bills stay yours.

Share your stack

@wajahat

MyDiary AI

shared
Androidlive7 tools

Framework

Kotlin
Jetpack Compose

Backend

Supabase

AI

AssemblyAI
Anthropic

Payments

RevenueCat

Analytics

PostHog

peekstack.shipkaro.dev/s/wajahat/mydiary-ai

You already forgot.

Which Google account is the RevenueCat under?

Is that Supabase project still on the free tier?

What am I actually paying for this app each month?

You knew all of it six months ago. Then you shipped the next app.

How it works

1

Add an app

One entry per thing you've built — MyDiary AI, that Chrome extension, the side project you keep meaning to finish.

2

Record its stack

Attach the tools. For the ones with an account, note the login, the tier, the cost. For Kotlin or Compose, just the name.

3

Share it, or don't

Flip one toggle and your stack gets a public link. Your logins, project names, dashboard URLs and notes stay behind.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Yes, and not because we remember to hide it. The public page reads from a separate database view that has no login_email column at all — there is nothing there to reveal. The underlying tables refuse anonymous access outright.

    Same for your project names, dashboard links and notes. They are not filtered out of the public page; they never reach it.

  • No. Every app is private by default. Sharing is one toggle, per app, and you can hide individual tools from a stack you do share.

  • Only if you say so. Each app has three settings:

    • Show nothing — just the tools
    • Show the tier — “Free”, “Pro”, but never the amount
    • Show the tier and the monthly cost

    The default is nothing.

  • Yes, while it's young. If a paid tier ever appears, recording your own stacks privately will stay free.

  • Because “what is this built with?” is the question every maker gets asked and nobody enjoys answering twice. A link answers it once — and it's a quietly good page to put in a README, a launch post, or a portfolio.

Write it down once.

It takes about two minutes for your first app, and you'll thank yourself the next time a renewal email shows up.