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Good vibesss all around: OpenAl to Buy Startup Windsurf for $3 Billion
Nice to see a Product Hunt advertiser do well!

Is the "one-person startup" dream actually real?
Feels like everywhere you look right now, there s a new AI tool promising you can build a company solo.
No team. No budget. Just you, a laptop, and some clever prompts.
And sure building something solo has never been easier.
But building something that lasts? Feels like a different game.
You can ship faster. You can look bigger than you are.
But can you really wear all the hats founder, marketer, builder, support forever?
If you're building solo right now, what s been harder than you expected?
If you scaled a team, when did you know it was time?
What excites you most about AI today?
AI is growing faster than ever, and honestly, it feels like we re riding a giant wave of creativity and innovation!
From generative art to powerful language models, automation at work, and AI-powered healthcare breakthroughs it s amazing how much is happening.
But here s the cool part: different things spark excitement for different people. Maybe it s a tool that made a tough job easier. Maybe it s a crazy new concept that opened your mind to fresh possibilities. Maybe it s just that "OMG" feeling you get when you see AI pull off something wild (like my Auntie, who literally gasped the first time she saw ChatGPT could calculate calories of her plates! ).
I'd love to hear what s making you most excited about AI right now! Big or small moments, drop them below and let's discuss together.
Will creativity lose its meaning in the age of AI?
Lately, I ve been reflecting on the quiet fear that, as AI tools become better at creating art, writing, and design, creativity itself might lose its meaning.
It feels like a valid concern because:
AI can produce beautiful art and music faster than a human ever could,
Many creative fields are shifting from original creation to "curating" or "editing" AI outputs,
Instant generation often replaces slow, imperfect human exploration,
Younger generations are growing up with AI co-creation as the norm, not the exception.
I wonder:
Will true creativity still matter when "good enough" is instantly available?





