Gaze into your crystal ball and share what you think is going to happen with AI in 2025! Will this be the year of the vibecoder? Is there an industry that you think will be transformed by AI? Whether you're predicting revolutionary breakthroughs or subtle shifts, drop your predictions in the comments!
I'm fascinated by the ability to extend what Cursor can do with MCP features but there are so many out there, with some of questionable pedigree, that I'm having a hard time finding the gems.
I've tried a few but so far I've only gotten good usage from the Think tool which allows Cursor to basically jot down notes on it's process which it can then refer to later. Theoretically allowing more context than just the context window https://github.com/DannyMac180/m... Since I've installed it Cursor seems to use it a lot but it's hard to gauge how much it helps in practice. I'm glad the AI likes it though :)
My two co-founders and I have been building WebGremlin, our first SaaS, for 1-2 months now. It s a website analysis tool. After we did the customer dev, we targeted three groups: business owners, marketers, and marketing agencies. We validated business owners with an MVP and made a few sales, so we started working on version 1.
We are having a soft launch now and it showed lower than expected conversion from business owners. However a few marketing agencies reached out, asking for an agency plan and are ready to pay, even without the features they want, basically saying "shut up and take my money".
Now we re stuck. Agencies seem like the hotter market, but pivoting means redoing our homepage, marketing, and adding features, more dev work when I d rather focus on marketing. Also we haven't done our official launch so it's still early to say if we should pivot or not. Do we stick with business owners or pivot to agencies? What s the smart move here?
I scout for a handful of investors in Silicon Valley. One of my jobs is to cut through the noise and surface the gems. Every so often, someone sends me a blurb that s crisp, compelling, and makes me want to learn more. When that happens, I usually take a meeting and sometimes even make intros.
That said, most blurbs I see aren t great. Founders are flying blind because no one s willing to be brutally honest with them. Let s fix that.
I had the good fortune to have a ton of great investors who backed my last company, Seedscout. Most of them are generally more private online, but I wanted to highlight some of them for founders on the fundraising trail to learn about. I d work with these folks 10/10 times again if I start something else up (no plans to right now).
Kenny Tucker (Tucker Seed Fund) Kenny is a machine. He was previously an exec at PlanGrid and Proxy, has a wealth of knowledge about this industry, and is just a gem of a human. He was incredibly helpful to me from brainstorming to capital strategy even when Seedscout was going sideways.
Let s bring back everyone s favorite kind of feedback: brutally honest and weirdly helpful. Drop a link to your landing page in the comments. Then roast someone else s. Keep it real, keep it useful, keep it (mostly) kind
With so many powerful AI models out there Claude 3, Gemini, Mistral, LLaMA, Grok and others (exclude ChatGPT) it's becoming more important to choose the right one for the job.
Whether it's coding, writing, summarizing, reasoning, chat, image generation, or research what's your go-to model for each task, and why?
Would love to hear how the community is using different models in the real world. Let s map out the AI model landscape together!
I'm a newbie @mattt_lim (about a month old) and it feels like Product Hunt is playing hard to get with me
Here's what I'm experiencing:
My posts only appear publicly about 12 hours after I write them
My comments show up days later
Today I got a notification for a comment someone left on my post 5 days ago! Each piece of feedback is precious, and I felt bad not being able to respond immediately
Earlier today I shared how you can use it to swap your face into any existing thumbnail. But I've been testing changing the emotion in my face and adding things like pointing fingers! Thumbnails are one of the most important things to help your channel grow. Get the clicks! ChatGPT just made it insanely easy for anyone to create high quality thumbnails!
Ever accidentally revealed sensitive info during a demo? It happens to the best of us.
Our Redaction Feature lets you instantly blur or hide confidential content without re-recording. In seconds, you can protect customer data, internal notes, or pricing details across all your demos.
We just integrated DeepSeek-V3-0324 into Trickle, and instead of running a $1M hackathon, we decided to give everyone unlimited free tokens for the next 3 days!
I ve seen a lot of people jump straight into building an app without validating the idea first. Some succeed, but many end up realizing too late that there s little demand for their product.
A successful product is often seen as one that is well-commercialized, with users willing to pay for it. But is that always the case?
Today, I came across many products that are incredibly fun and creative. It made me wonder: are there products that don t fit the conventional definition of success? Maybe some exist just to bring joy, even if users simply visit, smile, and leave.
Some might argue that if something brings value, people will naturally be willing to pay. But is that always true?