Some folks need total silence. Others need lo-fi beats, caffeine, and a messy Notion doc.
Me? I m usually recording on Clueso in my workspace with background chatter and chaos not ideal, but honestly, it doesn t bother me much. Clueso cleans up things and replaces the audio with a solid voiceover, so I don t have to stress about the noise.
You can now use tabs in the Tana Desktop app no setup needed (just reload). Just like in your browser, tabs let you keep multiple pages open in one window: daily notes, projects, meetings whatever you re working on, side-by-side and ready to go.
Most AI startups today build tools to help existing companies work faster or smarter. But Y Combinator is doubling down on a much more ambitious vision: full-stack AI startups that don t just improve industries they replace them.
Instead of selling AI to law firms, why not build an AI-first law firm?
Instead of helping developers write code, why not launch a fully automated dev agency?
Why sell to customer service teams when you can eliminate the need for them entirely?
We always hear about the big, popular productivity tools but I m more interested in the quiet game-changers. The tools that aren t in every headline but made a huge difference in how you work or build.
Every time I try out a new app or SaaS tool, I go straight to the pricing page, even if I don t plan to buy or subscribe. I m just curious to see how much they thinks it s worth.
Most products still stick with the good old subscription model, which makes sense, it's reliable, predictable, and aligns with ongoing costs. But more and more apps are starting to offer a lifetime option as well, and honestly I kind of love that.
We gearing up for the launch of WebGremlin.ai and of course, planning to submit to PH. But I m curious, where else do you share your products to get traction? What are other platforms, forums, or communities that have worked well for you (like hackernews)? And while we re at it, what s your go-to initial launch strategy to make some noise?