I'm a current high school junior who discovered a passion for both tech and entrepreneurship over the summer. I just love how entrepreneurship involves risk-taking and the fact that I get to develop a product or a service that can improve the lives of thousands of people. Tech is just fascinating, and I developed an interest in it through AI.
Chipmaker Nvidia announced this week it will be investing up to $100 billion (with a B) in OpenAI to help it build out its computing power. This follows OpenAI s move earlier this month to buy $300B in computer power from Oracle.
I m new here and really excited to join this awesome community full of such great energy.
In just a couple of days I m planning to launch my very first SaaS app here on PH Since this is my first launch, I d love to hear from you, do you have any tips, tricks, or lessons learned from your own experiences?
Every little insight helps and I d truly appreciate your advice
In 2022, it became public that TikTok (or rather its parent company ByteDance) had used the app to monitor the communication of journalists in the U.S.
AI is already making its way into legal work and not just for quick answers. We see it being used to:
Run trademark & patent searches.
Draft contracts, NDAs, and even patent applications.
Analyze contracts for risks & compliance issues.
Monitor competitors and patent landscapes.
Even manage entire IP portfolios deadlines, renewals, payments, and filings across countries.
Some of these feel like a natural fit for automation. But others like drafting contracts or advising on risks are much more sensitive.
What do you think: where should AI stop in legal work? Would you trust it to handle filings, contracts, compliance checks or even to run your whole IP portfolio on autopilot?
Hey there, as you know I launched Rolyai almost 2 weeks ago. And maybe you read my article about the first 3 days. It actually popped off quite well, so thank you for reading
This Article will cover how to keep your momentum after launch as well as just getting some momentum rolling.
Kilo Code is an open-source, model-agnostic AI code assistant with transparent pricing. First launched 6 months ago and after 420,000+ downloads on @VS Code and @Cursor, the team is bringing it to the @JetBrains ecosystem (IntelliJ IDEA, PyCharm, WebStorm...) and they will be live on @Product Hunt this Sunday, September 28.
Follow @Kilo Code for the latest updates. Oh and one more thing: I'm hosting an X Space with their team this Friday, September 26, at 3 PM UTC / 5 PM CET / 11 AM EST to talk Product Hunt for developer tools.
Hi everyone! I m Kseniia, CMO at iPNOTE an AI-powered platform that helps founders and companies protect their ideas and manage IP worldwide.
I ve been an entrepreneur for 5+ years (marketing agency, dev studio, HRTech startup) and I know how often IP protection ends up at the bottom of the priority list until it suddenly becomes a big problem . That s one of the reasons I joined iPNOTE to help make IP protection simple, affordable, and accessible for founders everywhere.
I don't actually like using the term "vibe coding". We've been software developers for over a decade ,are not one-shotting features, and have a very opinionated and strict dev process.
Today, I came across an article on Techcrunch describing research that found that AI models not only hallucinate, but also lie.
While these are small lies, such as claiming that a task was completed when it wasn t, researchers stress they haven t seen harmful scheming in real-world use yet, but warn risks will rise as AI takes on more complex tasks.
We often talk about big features like AI, automation, or integrations, but sometimes it s the small, overlooked ones that keep users loyal. For example, in my experience, a simple smart reminder system has done wonders for engagement.
I m curious what s that one underrated feature you ve seen (or built) in a SaaS product that makes a real difference in customer stickiness?