I ve been exploring MCP, an open standard from @Anthropic that aims to simplify AI integrations.
In theory, this should make it easier to connect AI with databases, task managers, or even development tools. But I m curious to know how well it actually works in practice.
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?
Im looking for bloggers, writers and in general content creators who write articles or long posts about: Social Media Marketing, Social Media Growth, Youtube Channel growth and in general growing social media reach.
Are you one of those busy folks??? If so, drop some of you latest work below, like articles, or substacks or whatever you have (text content or youtube video that I can transcribe). Share maximum 2 links please :)
I will add your work in the Blog page of my upcoming app.
@Vercel hosted a Next.js Global Hackathon last week, and @bolt.new pushed it one step forward by announcing hackathon.dev the world s largest hackathon for non-devs and vibe coders with $1M+ in prizes!
It will start on May 30. Any plans to join it? Curious what the community will build.
Most people phone it in on their 404 page. Some of you didn t. If yours has a little personality or went completely off the rails drop it here. Let s see who actually tried.
Here's ours! It cycles through different team member's pets because who doesn't love pets?
I feel like it would be pretty awesome to have a short video scrolling feature to discover the products that maybe could not make it to the top but have so much value.
Then even if your launch flopped you can redeem yourself by appearing in the feed of others.
Hi everyone, We've added some basic search functionality to the forums to help you find discussions. You can search forums from the global search, or in the sidebar from anywhere in our forums. We're interested in your feedback on this feature, as we're going to be iterating on this feature to help make our forums more useful. Let us know what features you want out of search!
Hey Product Hunt! I'm Waseem Daher, co-founder of Pilot, the largest startup-focused accounting company in the US. I'm a 3x founder (my previous ventures were acquired by Oracle and Dropbox) who's raised over $120M from Sequoia, Stripe, Jeff Bezos, and more.
Today we're releasing our 2025 Founder Salary Report with data from 1,800+ founders, and the findings might surprise you:
Founder salaries dropped 43% in the past year
AI founders are bucking the trend (paying themselves more)
Bootstrapped companies jumped 57%
Only 5.4% of founders pay themselves nothing (down from 9% last year)
We founders talk endlessly about burn rates, runway, and valuations but no one talks about what they pay themselves. It's time to change that.
OP-ED? Recently I've been finding myself actually buying and downloading apps more than before. The common thread? They're all silly things that almost do nothing. I say almost because what they do offer is a bit of joy during my work day. Some of the recent apps I've purchased or downloaded are @Klack, Googly Eyes, @Docko, @Ball,@TabTab, and @NotchNook. Some of these do have productivity or quality of life improvements (looking at the last two) but others are simply about making the computer fun again. For example @Klack has genuinely made me more focused when I type and I've been able to zone in on work. It's like each clickity-clack is driving me closer to where I want to go and idk, the feedback just feels GOOD. The audio is also really nice, not sure how I can explain it, but feels very high-def for something that is mimicking a tactical feeling. All these apps remind me of a time where shareware and P2P ( @Limewire ) was more popular. Where you might be okay buying a CD or floppy and installing something fun on your computer, then telling (sharing) your buddy about it. And with the rise of vibe coding, I think we're going to see vibeware become a thing. Where users will create something fun, quickly, using AI tools like @Cursor, @Replit, or @bolt.new/@Lovable and then put it at a super low cost or have a free-trial (shareware). Those that don't want to pay, will create their own iteration of it and choose their own distribution method (P2P) but it won't eat at the original. It's my genuine feeling that the internet is about to become fun again (it's already started) and I'm curious if I'm the only one feeling this way and/or embracing it? What do you think? Is the era of vibeware a good thing? And if not why should we refute it? This piece was written with FKJ - Just Piano in the background.