withnubo.com/@handle. It is a simple builder page: your name, a short bio, your avatar, the date you joined, the Frames you have chosen to make public, your recent deployments, and an activity heatmap that fills in as you ship.
It is one identity for people and organizations alike. A personal account and a standard organization each get their own @handle and their own page, built the same way.
What a profile shows
Name, bio, and avatar
The display name, short bio, and picture you set in Settings.
Joined date
When the account or organization was created.
Public Frames
Only the Frames you have marked Public, each linking to its live URL.
Recent deployments
The latest deploys across your public Frames.
Activity heatmap
A calendar view that shows how often you have been shipping.
Turning it on
There are two switches, and both are yours to control. Publish your profile. Go to Settings > Profile and turn on the public-profile toggle. Until you flip it on, nothing is shown publicly. Once it is on, anyone with the link can visit your page atwithnubo.com/@handle.
Make a Frame public. Every Frame is Private by default, and only Public Frames appear on a profile. Open a Frame’s Settings > Visibility and switch it to Public. Private Frames stay visible only to people with access to the Project.
Changing a Frame’s visibility requires an organization admin. If you are not an admin of the owning organization, ask one to make the Frame public or private for you.
What stays private
A profile only ever shows what you deliberately opt in. Project ids, environment variables, email addresses, and internal hostnames are never part of the page, so nothing sensitive is exposed just because a profile is live. The two defaults are worth remembering together. An organization’s profile page is public by default, but its Frames are Private by default. That means a fresh profile shows your name and bio and nothing else until you make a Frame public on purpose.Related
Frames
Set a Frame to Public or Private from its Settings
Organizations
Handles, roles, and how a workspace is shared
Concepts and terms
The words Nubo uses, in one place
