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ShipRelay
Ship features. We deliver the changelog
ShipRelay auto-generates changelogs from your GitHub commits, then delivers via hosted page, email digest, and in-app widget. Track views, opens, and engagement. Generation + delivery + analytics. Free tier available.
ShipRelay came from a simple observation: generating changelogs is basically solved, but getting them in front of users isn’t.
There are great tools (git-cliff, semantic-release, AI workflows) that turn commits into release notes. But in most small teams, those changelogs either sit in GitHub or don’t get written at all.
On the flip side, tools that handle delivery (email, widgets, etc.) usually assume you’ll write everything manually and are priced for larger teams.
So I built ShipRelay to connect those two pieces.
You connect a GitHub repo, it generates a changelog on each release, and then pushes it out through:
a hosted changelog page
an email digest
an embeddable in-app widget
It also has audience modes in the changelogs. It generates four structurally different versions from the same set of commits :
developer (breaking changes, migrations)
user-facing (plain language)
exec summary (impact)
shareable/announcement style
You can edit before publishing, but the goal is to remove as much manual work as possible.
If you’re curious, you can try it instantly on any public repo (no signup): https://shiprelay.io/demo
What I’m most interested in: When you ship something, do you actually communicate it to users—or does it mostly stay in GitHub?
Also very open to hearing why you wouldn’t use something like this.
About ShipRelay on Product Hunt
“Ship features. We deliver the changelog”
ShipRelay was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 0 upvotes and 1 comments, placing #158 on the daily leaderboard. ShipRelay auto-generates changelogs from your GitHub commits, then delivers via hosted page, email digest, and in-app widget. Track views, opens, and engagement. Generation + delivery + analytics. Free tier available.
On the analytics side, ShipRelay competes within SaaS, Developer Tools and Artificial Intelligence — topics that collectively have 1M followers on Product Hunt. The dashboard above tracks how ShipRelay performed against the three products that launched closest to it on the same day.
Who hunted ShipRelay?
ShipRelay was hunted by ShipRelay. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
For a complete overview of ShipRelay including community comment highlights and product details, visit the product overview.
Hey Product Hunt 👋
ShipRelay came from a simple observation: generating changelogs is basically solved, but getting them in front of users isn’t.
There are great tools (git-cliff, semantic-release, AI workflows) that turn commits into release notes. But in most small teams, those changelogs either sit in GitHub or don’t get written at all.
On the flip side, tools that handle delivery (email, widgets, etc.) usually assume you’ll write everything manually and are priced for larger teams.
So I built ShipRelay to connect those two pieces.
You connect a GitHub repo, it generates a changelog on each release, and then pushes it out through:
a hosted changelog page
an email digest
an embeddable in-app widget
It also has audience modes in the changelogs. It generates four structurally different versions from the same set of commits :
developer (breaking changes, migrations)
user-facing (plain language)
exec summary (impact)
shareable/announcement style
You can edit before publishing, but the goal is to remove as much manual work as possible.
If you’re curious, you can try it instantly on any public repo (no signup):
https://shiprelay.io/demo
What I’m most interested in:
When you ship something, do you actually communicate it to users—or does it mostly stay in GitHub?
Also very open to hearing why you wouldn’t use something like this.