Shipped tini.bio 2.0
We shipped tini.bio 2.0 this week. Complete rebuild from the ground up.
The old version worked. But watching how people used it, I realized the CMS-style interface was too complicated. Separate sections for projects, posts, links. Too rigid. Too much like building a blog when all you wanted was a simple, beautiful page.
So we threw it all out.
What’s new
The biggest change is the editor. Everything now lives in one place. Your bio, links, images, content, all built using blocks you can drag, drop, and arrange into any layout. No more navigating between sections. No more wondering where things will appear.
Bento-style layouts are the visual payoff. If you’ve seen those grid layouts on sites like Linear or Vercel, that’s what I’m talking about. No more vertical list of links that looks like everyone else’s. Your page can finally look as unique as you are.
And then there’s Pages. This is the big one. Your tini.bio is no longer just a single page. Create additional pages for whatever you need: a portfolio, a menu, a services page, an about page. Each page lives under your main URL and can be linked from your profile or shared directly.
This is what makes tini.bio more than a link-in-bio tool. It’s actually a website now.
Why we rebuilt everything
The old tini tried to do too much. Features that sounded good on paper but added complexity without adding value.
Tini 2.0 is focused. It does one thing really well: it helps you create a stunning personal site you can share with one link. And by focusing on that one thing, we made it dramatically better.
Most people have their page live in under five minutes now.
What’s next
This is just the beginning. More block types, more themes, analytics improvements, custom domains. Tini 2.0 gives us a foundation we can actually build on.
I even made a YouTube video walking through the new editor if you want to see it in action.
If you haven’t tried the new version yet, check it out.
This rebuild followed the same philosophy I wrote about in AI flipped my design workflow. And it came after noticing something interesting: small businesses started showing up as our users.