Google Drive is great for sharing files.
But nobody ever got excited about receiving a Drive link.
I guess there’s a better, more sexy way for sharing files.
Do you know what it is? 😉
2026 is wild.
You can build an app with AI.
But somehow getting it online is still the hard part.
Build it with Claude.
Host it yourself.
Share it with the world.
Research says the average person has at least 1 'finished' project sitting unused on their laptop right now.
If that's you, you need to check out tiiny.host/create
Nothing kills momentum faster than:
"Looks great, now figure out how to host it"
You literally just spent hours making the thing.
Getting it online shouldn't become a second project.
So what file formats do we actually support? 😅
like… a ton.
Code, docs, spreadsheets, images, zip files
You get the idea.
Full list on our helpdesk 👇helpdesk.tiiny.host/en/artic…
Most teams underestimate how much time file-sharing delays actually waste.
Not because the delays are huge, but because they happen constantly.
Uploads.
Resends.
Processing waits.
Attachment limits.
Traditional tools optimize for storage.
Modern workflows need speed.
Share your file in 60 seconds with @TiinyHost ⚡
What’s your biggest file-sharing frustration?
Most work gets created faster than it gets shared.
The real productivity killer is:
Export → upload → resend → wait.
@TiinyHost makes sharing simple:
Upload your file → get a link instantly → share anywhere.
Fast work deserves fast visibility.
A lot of people confuse sharing with deploying.
They’re not the same thing.
If you’re launching to production,
Sure use the full stack.
If you’re just showing someone what you built,
Upload → Link → Send is enough.
The internet somehow convinced people that sharing a basic website needs a full deployment process.
It doesn’t.
Sometimes all you need is a live link in under 10 seconds.
The project took 15 minutes.
Sharing it took 25.
That doesn't make sense.
Upload. Get a link. Share.
That's how file sharing should work.
⚡ Built for people who'd rather create than wrestle with file-sharing tools.