Hey folks todai team is here. It's Gosha, i'm responsible for the team operations.
We just quietly launched our private beta and let a small wave of early users in. And while our AI assistant is great at handling emotions, we re still fixing some very human bugs layout quirks, weird edge cases, the usual chaos.
Right now we re:
- testing the app across dozens of real-life daily struggles
Our team has been talking to folks who ve tried all the usual stuff: journaling apps, therapy apps, meditation timers, habit trackers.
And yet the fog stays.
Why? Because most tools just throw you into a loop of logging, tracking, optimizing without ever helping you understand what s going on under the surface.
However, when I see someone is already starting to hire an employee, the question crosses my mind: What profit has that person achieved when they can afford to pay another extra person?
Hey folks! Some friends of mine are launching a self-care wellness app built as a Telegram mini app. They're based in Eastern Europe, where Telegram is hugely popular and widely used for all sorts of things. They asked for my help in marketing it globally but I'm hesitant. Living in the US, I mostly see Telegram associated with sketchy stuff: black market services, shady job offers, etc. It has a pretty bad rep here. So I'm wondering Is it just me? How is Telegram perceived in your country? And if someone you trust recommended a really good app, would the fact that it's on Telegram be a dealbreaker for you? Would love to hear your thoughts before I commit to helping them.
Hey everyone, I ve been playing around with different ways to keep my ideas, research, and drafts in check, but it still feels like I m drowning in research. :P
I ve tried traditional note-taking apps, but they re not flexible. And mind maps? They start out fine but turn into a mess as it gets complex with more data.
Notion, Obsidian, and Roam are great, but they re not for everyone. Maybe you found something simpler, faster, or just less overwhelming. What s the one productivity tool you actually stick with the one that makes life easier instead of adding more work?
A few of us at Product Hunt are putting on our most brutally honest (but helpful!) hats and roasting landing pages for the next two days. Want in? Drop your link below, and we ll give you real, no-BS feedback on:
Clarity Does your message make sense or sound like corporate soup? Calls to Action Do we feel compelled to click, or just leave? Design & UX Smooth experience or rage quit territory? Anything else Tell us what you want feedback on.
Sider is an AI sidebar extension that weaves AI into daily workflows, serving 10M+ users from novices to tech pros with a 4.9-star rating. By integrating leading AI models (ChatGPT, Claude, DeepSeek, Gemini) and multi-modal tools for broad understanding, followed by enhanced content processing for instant comprehension.
Last week, I downloaded and purchased @AgBr after seeing it on the homepage. Its design and super specific goal just immediately clicked with me. I love black & white photography, and this was a really interesting and approachable way to experiment with it; even though I've never been much of a photographer myself. I'm usually just appreciating others' photos.
But then, over this past weekend, I noticed that I kept feeling compelled to take pictures throughout my day so that I could play around with different filters and try out different levels of film grain on them. Having the tools to create was suddenly making me look for more and more opportunities to use them.
I m Anastasia, a business analyst with a passion for turning data into meaningful insights. Over the past few years, I ve helped startups and growing companies optimize their products, improve user retention, and make data-driven decisions that actually move the needle.
My focus areas:
Breaking down complex business problems into actionable insights
Identifying hidden bottlenecks that impact product growth