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Chatting with AI isn't market research; it's a séance.
Let s be real: If you ask a standard LLM about your "revolutionary" idea, it will tell you exactly what you want to hear. It s programmed to be polite, not to be a co-founder. Betting your life savings on a "confident hallucination" is just gambling with extra steps.
We built Bunzee.ai (and Business GPT) because we were tired of "vibes-based" building. Instead of just chatting, we plugged in 200,000+ objective data points to act as a Stress-Test Machine for your brain.
I’m a UI/UX designer who’s tired of "Beautiful Junk."
Hi PH! I ve spent the last decade obsessing over bento grids and micro-interactions. But recently, I had a bit of an identity crisis. I realized I was spending 4 hours color-grading a button for a product that might not even have a single user.
As a designer-founder, the hardest part isn't the code or the pixels it's the silence after you launch something nobody asked for. I m now on a mission to stop being a "Visionary" and start being a "Data Detective." I'm forcing myself to look at cold, hard spreadsheets before I even open Figma. It s painful, it s not "pretty," but it s the only way I ve found to keep my sanity in this AI-saturated market.
Will AI and technology improve our skills or downgrade them?
Today, I read a study showing that social media use is linked to weaker reading, vocabulary, and word-recognition skills in teens under 16.
Yesterday, I read an article saying that students who used AI showed up to 55% less brain activity and remembered less.
According to the news, if this is what technology was supposed to help us with and make our lives easier, then I don t see the future very brightly.
On the contrary, I have to say that I use AI for education (e.g. for building, explaining things when I do not understand them). But 80% of people just take the information and do not bother to think about other things.
Yes, we can save a lot of time, and mental capacity/energy with "no memorising" but do we really spend that saved time on something useful and meaningful?
Why B2B is broken and how to fix it
Hi community,
The other day I was struggling with LinkedIn, its support, overpriced packages, and terrible UX, and thought: this can t be real. In the age of AI, there s still this massive legacy platform sitting on a pile of data, acting as a gatekeeper to the B2B world, yet outdated as hell.
"Founder’s Intuition" is the most expensive lie we tell ourselves.
Let s be honest: We love to romanticize the "gut feeling." We think being a founder is an art form, but in 2026, where anyone can ship an app in a weekend, "guessing" has become a luxury we can't afford.
I built Bunzee.ai because I was tired of watching brilliant makers (including myself) waste months building beautiful solutions for problems that don't exist. I wanted to turn the "art" of market research into a cold, hard math problem. By processing over 200,000 objective data points, Bunzee doesn't just "chat" with you it stress-tests your logic until only the truth remains:
The Market Reality: It replaces "I think people want this" with a validated TAM/SAM/SOM score.
The Combat Strategy: It carves out your ERRC positioning so you re not just another "me-too" product.
The Blueprint: It translates raw data into an immediate execution plan (PRD & Mockups) so you ship with conviction, not hope.
Figma vs Reality! Why your "Original Vision" is usually a lie.
Hi PH!
I m a UI/UX designer with a CS background, and I ve finally realized that my first product vision was basically just a beautiful hallucination.
What was your initial motivation for starting a business?
People s motivations for wanting something of their own vary quite a lot.
So far, though, I ve most often heard these three answers:
To make a lot of money.
To work really hard until 30 so I can relax later in life.
Time and location freedom.
Everyone says "build in public"… but how do you do it without making it a full-time job?
Building in public is important today. It helps you build a community, get feedback, and create traction around your product. But creating content to share every day shorts, posts on X, LinkedIn, Instagram can quickly become boring and very time consuming.
By recording your meetings with Prodshort, you get content ready to share: Shorts, X posts, LinkedIn posts... You keep things authentic, because the AI documents what you actually do and doesn t create fake content from scratch. Your real progress, your real discussions, your real decisions become things you can share.
It makes build in public much easier. You can share updates about your project directly from your calls: progress, ideas, feedback, small wins... Stay consistent with your build in public without adding extra work to your day !!
Version 1.0.28

We've launched officially week ago, and so far Highlight Studio has been trough 100s of beta tester hands.
In this past week Highlight Studio has grown with bunch of new features that were built by getting feature requests directly from beta testing community.
List of things that were added:
Overall:
Layout regions
Zoom adjustments with canvas zooming
Title cards
What's something you're embarrassed to admit you still do manually even though AI could do it?
I'll go first.
I still reply to every comment manually. Reddit, LinkedIn, Product Hunt, forums, Twitter, Discord. Every single one.
AI could do this. There are tools that generate replies, post on schedule, analyze sentiment, even mimic your brand voice. But I don't use them. Here's why.
A 2024 study on community engagement across 500 brands found that personalized responses drive 3.2x higher retention and 4.7x more repeat interactions than automated replies. People can tell when a response is copy-pasted. They can feel when no one actually read their comment. The average user only needs 2-3 automated interactions before they disengage entirely.
How many calls do you do per day?
As founders, calls are part of our daily life. Brainstorming, quick updates, random discussions with the team and there s always value in those moments. But most of the time, all that value just disappears after the call.
By connecting Prodshort to your calendar, it automatically joins your calls and turns them into ready-to-post content.
If you're a founder and want to create content, I'm doing short discussion calls. Let's connect !!
End of an era: Tim Cook to become Apple Executive Chairman; John Ternus to become Apple CEO

Apple announced that Tim Cook will become executive chairman of Apple s board of directors and John Ternus, senior vice president of Hardware Engineering, will become Apple s next chief executive officer effective on September 1, 2026. The transition, which was approved unanimously by the Board of Directors, follows a thoughtful, long-term succession planning process.
Cook will continue in his role as CEO through the summer as he works closely with Ternus on a smooth transition. As executive chairman, Cook will assist with certain aspects of the company, including engaging with policymakers around the world.
Just in time for Ternus to usher in a new era for Apple and a revamped Siri in the age of AI at WWDC, in its 50th year.
Coming up next on Velo: turn prompts into clear, explanatory videos in minutes
Things have been moving really fast at Velo.
The pace at which we're building based on feedback has honestly been a bit crazy, in a good way.
We're shipping, iterating, and learning fast.
Stop betting your startup on AI hallucinations. (Get real data in 10 mins)
Hey PH!
Let s be honest: Building an app is the easy part now. But 35% of startups still fail because they build something the market doesn't actually need. Most AI "research" tools just give you plausible-sounding lies.
We built an agentic workflow that doesn't just "chat" it executes the boring, painful parts of market validation.
Why this UI/UX designer decided to stop "just drawing screens
Hi PH !
I m a UI/UX designer with a CS background, and for a long time, I was obsessed with pixel-perfect bento grids and smooth micro-interactions. But after seeing so many "pretty" projects fail because they missed the actual market need, I had a sobering realization: A beautiful interface can't save a product nobody wants.
We built a secure RAG engine & lightweight DMS. What features are we missing?
Hey everyone,
Our small engineering team just finished building the core architecture for CordonData, a secure RAG engine and lightweight Document Management System (DMS) built for enterprise AI.
Rather than talking about how complex data pipelines are, I want to share exactly what we ve built to solve the infrastructure side of AI, and get your direct feedback on what we should build next.
Here is what the platform currently handles out-of-the-box:
Small apps. Real learning. Indie dev.
Hey Product Hunt community!
I m Muradiye, an indie iOS developer based in Europe.
I build small, simple apps the kind that solve one problem well instead of trying to do everything.
Most of my work is focused on:
Building a QA tool - would love feedback
Hey everyone
I m Qadeer, a solo builder working on Bugsnap AI - a tool that turns screenshots into Jira-ready bug reports.
Vercel Day is live 🚨
Vercel Day is live on Product Hunt today.
We teamed up with @Vercel for a special launch day, which means there s a dedicated leaderboard full of teams shipping on Vercel, all in one place. More launches, more competition, more reasons to spend too long refreshing the page.
Anthropic just dropped Opus 4.7
Here s what changed:
Production-ready code with minimal oversight, and it can verify its own outputs
More control over reasoning effort
3x better vision (now up to 3.75MP images)
Improved instruction following and overall reliability
New xhigh reasoning mode for finer control between speed and depth
Same pricing as Opus 4.6 ($5 and $25 per million input and output tokens). The new tokenizer can use around 1.0 to 1.35x more tokens depending on content, though this can be managed through effort settings and task budgets.





