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🧠Prototype Testing (Beta) — AI users test your Figma prototypes in 2 minutes
Hey everyone!
We just pushed a big new beta feature live in Yo and wanted to share it here first.
We're calling it Prototype Testing it lets an AI user run through your Figma prototype and exposes exactly where the flow breaks.
Hiring? Looking for work? [Startup Roles October 2025]
Building a team or want to join a startup?
Founders, teams, and startups drop a comment if you're hiring.
We Tanked our Product Hunt Launch on Purpose
There are a hundred posts about how to succeed on Product Hunt.
This is about how to not fail.
Our latest Product Hunt launch was a disaster. Just as we had hoped.
Yo’s latest release is live 🚀 Feedback from your own personas
Hello Friends of Yo!
We ve been iterating Yo to make design feedback faster and a little more fun.
Today we re launching a feature that s been highly requested: you can now use your own personas and get feedback directly from them inside Figma.
🤖 Is your AI hurting your pricing model?
Added AI features to make users more efficient? That's great... until you realize they need fewer seats but get 10x more value.
The problem:
5 AI-powered users = $500/month
Next evolution of Jo!
Hello Friends of Jo!
As you know we recently sunset the old Jo ... but that's because we took the core of it and added in what people said they wanted more > synthetic users to give feedback in addition to real users. And this time around, we've packed this up as a Figma plugin to take this right into workflows where products are designed.
We're launching this as Yo today - take it for a spin here:
https://www.producthunt.com/prod...
Cheers/ Rags
Yo for Figma - Talk to users before you have users. Right in Figma.
Jo's on summer holiday
Packed her bag, made a mixtape, and hit the road.
Jo, your friendly little user researcher, is officially off-duty for now. She spent her time helping builders get feedback fast, and we've learned so much from everyone who gave her a spin.
Poll: Which product do you use the most? Bolt, Lovable, Replit, or v0?
Curious what's your preference: @bolt.new @Lovable @Replit @v0 by Vercel? or else?
New in Jo: Your Feedback Team is here (PM, Design & User insights)
Hey everyone
An update from the Jo team + a small request for your feedback.
Thoughts on the new product/hub redesign?
Product Hunt has launched a significant reconfiguration of the product hub embedding launches within a company's or hub's frame:

Who do you get feedback from?
Hey Hunters!
Thanks for the warm welcome to Jo last week.
What’s one mindset shift that helped you grow (in work or life)?
When I first started in marketing, I used to wait for the perfect moment.
The perfect design.
The perfect words.
The perfect timing.
What's your AI stack for creating content?
If you had to make image or video with sound to publish what tools would you use? What type of content do you (or would you) produce with those tools?
Some tools I'm thinking of are
@Sora by OpenAI for video
@Suno.ai for music gen
@ChatGPT by OpenAI for image gen
and maybe something like @ReelFarm for UCG-esque automated content.
Jo - Meet Jo: The AI agent making user research effortless.
Vibe coding process - do we jump in or plan it out?
I'm super curious how everyone starts to vibe code? In the beginning I would simply jump into @bolt.new or @Cursor and just do a prompt and continue refining with the AI. I quickly realized this created a lot of issues as I didn't think about the structure, tech stack, and how I wanted the features to interact with each other and how the way I was building things would impact the user experience. I now do the following:
Write down a simple problem statement: "what am I trying to solve?"
Write down a simple solution statement: "what does the thing I'm building do (to solve the problem)"
Share the above with @ChatGPT by OpenAI and word vomit my thoughts, ideas, how I want the user to interact with my app, etc and ASK ChatGPT to turn everything I said and want into an easy to understand directive and instructions for an Engineer.
I then take the Engineer instructions and give it to a new chat in ChatGPT and ask it to turn those instructions into a prompt for an AI engineer and to break up the project into sections so that each time we focus on a section the app is shippable and keeps things easy to work on.
I take the output and paste it into my notes. I then give it to Cursor.
Once in Cursor, I create a new project folder and got at it!
Curious what everyone else does and if you've experience any things to avoid or must do
Vibe coding process - do we jump in or plan it out?
I'm super curious how everyone starts to vibe code? In the beginning I would simply jump into @bolt.new or @Cursor and just do a prompt and continue refining with the AI. I quickly realized this created a lot of issues as I didn't think about the structure, tech stack, and how I wanted the features to interact with each other and how the way I was building things would impact the user experience. I now do the following:
Write down a simple problem statement: "what am I trying to solve?"
Write down a simple solution statement: "what does the thing I'm building do (to solve the problem)"
Share the above with @ChatGPT by OpenAI and word vomit my thoughts, ideas, how I want the user to interact with my app, etc and ASK ChatGPT to turn everything I said and want into an easy to understand directive and instructions for an Engineer.
I then take the Engineer instructions and give it to a new chat in ChatGPT and ask it to turn those instructions into a prompt for an AI engineer and to break up the project into sections so that each time we focus on a section the app is shippable and keeps things easy to work on.
I take the output and paste it into my notes. I then give it to Cursor.
Once in Cursor, I create a new project folder and got at it!
Curious what everyone else does and if you've experience any things to avoid or must do
"Stupid apps" are the future and vibing coding will bring the rise of *vibeware* - and its okay.
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.
"Stupid apps" are the future and vibing coding will bring the rise of *vibeware* - and its okay.
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.








