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Meet the new Pretty Floating Button 🕹️
We experimented with a lot of layouts, buttons, and UI flows eventually we landed on a cleaner UI that feels lighter, faster, and more focused.
Sometimes the best UX improvements come not from adding more, but from removing what s in the way.
AI doesn’t fail loudly, it fails silently
No one talks about this enough.
When AI systems break, it s rarely with a crash or error log.
It s a slow drift, outputs that seem fine, context that fades, retries that quietly multiply.
Everything still runs, until one day it doesn t.
Join me in the Soberish October Challenge? 🤝

My friends at @ZBiotics Pre-Alcohol Probiotic are teaming up with @Sunnyside this October for the Soberish October Challenge, "a flexible way to reset on your own terms ahead of the holiday season."
Vibe Coded a dev tool for Vibe Coders!
Hey everyone,
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.
Customer found an additional use case to use our Product!
It's interesting how things evolve!
I was sitting at a customer office and they told how they used MarketFit at their exhibition!
Their rep or the customer himself/herself would enter pain-point/problem area in the MarketFit target context box, and get a specific solution with proof points!
This was just their third day of using MarketFit.
Sharing Something Super Personal - YoursJournaly
Hi I'm Ryker 👋Excited to join Product Hunt
Octomind goes CLI and other news
The summer that keeps on giving:
You now interact with Octomind via their CLI now. You can create, execute, and run tests, debug test cases locally, launch the private location worker and generate tests in batches.
You can use teardown to isolate your tests - we added teardown functionality to the steps editor. Teardown allows you to configure a test that cleans up artifacts created during test execution automatically. You can set it up using the app s interface or programmatically via a javascript step.
More news in the August product update https://octomind.dev/blog/produc...
Founders building products for neurodivergent users - what have you learned?
Curious to read some insights from developing tech products with ADHD/neurodivergent users in mind. What design decisions made the biggest difference? What assumptions were wrong?
Listening, learning, and building DoppelIQ – let’s swap stories 🚀
Hey, I m Ankur.
As a product marketer, I ve always believed the best ideas start with listening, or rather, 'really' listening to people s stories, challenges, and wins.
What’s the most "invisible” product you can’t live without?
We re working on smart home tech that aims to be invisible, useful, and quietly perfect in the background.
It s got me thinking
What’s the endgame for all these indie products?
I've been thinking about the endgame for all of us builders here. With so many products launching daily, and it getting easier and cheaper to build, we're seeing tons of tools in the same niche, often with similar pricing.
What happens next? Do the best user acquisition and marketing strategies end up winning by default? Or do user bases just split across multiple competing products that do 80% of the same thing?
Feels like the cost to build will keep dropping, so the real differentiator might not be features or price, but something else. Community? Brand? Distribution? Curious how others here see it playing out.
I'm Martin – building language learning apps
Hey Product Hunters!
My name is Martin. I've idled here a while, but I want to be more active, so hello folks!
👋 Hey everyone! Ani here building tryplaymaker.io
I m an engineer, marketer, maker, and someone who s spent way too much time trying to figure out what to actually do with tools like Clay, Apollo, Instantly, Smartlead, and Hubspot... especially in the early stages when you're still figuring out your go-to-market motion.
There s no shortage of tools or advice out there: playbooks, templates, videos, ebooks, but none of them know you.
Your industry.
How do you protect your identity and your data on the internet?
Each of us leaves a digital footprint on the internet. The only difference is how much data and information we share publicly about ourselves.
For example, my local friend doesn't use his photo or name on his profiles so that no one will associate him too much with his income or political ideology.
My latest post on Reddit got 300k+ views and 1000 upvotes. Here are 8 things that helped me go viral
1. Effort results
I ve spent hours on posts that got 0 attention. I wrote my most viral post in 10 minutes while having morning coffee. You never know what will take off. Don't overthink it, just start writing and posting.
2. Don't be afraid to help competitors
Some people say building in public I only give my competitors an advantage. That's is partly true. At least 2 people reached out and said they built a similar product after my posts.
But first, this is great - the more the merrier, and the market is big enough for everybody.
Second, your real edge is not the tech you are using. It's the attention to the product you can generate. And social media is the only way to achieve it if you don't have millions for marketing.
3. Reddit hate is brutal
If your post has even a faint smell of promotion - people will hate you on Reddit. And when they do, they hate firecely. Expect a lot of angry DMs and downvotes.
4. Share your REAL struggles
The only way to avoid this and still get views, is being real. Share scary and cringy stuff. If you feel like you re gonna burn from shame after posting - it means you are posting the right thing.
5. Post on the right subs
Not all Reddit subs are equal. Most ban promotion posts. I always post on r/SideProject or r/SaaS. They are friendly to builders and your story will more likely resonate there.
6. Adjacent audiences rock
Some say builder subs are useless, because only your competitors hang out there. This is not true.
After my viral post on r/SaaS, I got a lot of leads for Yadaphone. Turned out many people on r/Saas and r/SideProject are freelancers, business owners and digital nomads. They all needed a cheap overseas call solution and I got a ton of new paying customers.
7. Not posting a link works
Avoid including a link to your product in Reddit posts. First, it s the quickest way to get banned for promotion. Second, if people like your product, they will google it, and it s a huge boost for SEO. Just share the name of the product in the post or wait until somebody asks for the link in the comments (somebody always does).
8. Non-native English is an advantage
This is a bonus for all non-native speakers out there. I used to push all my texts through ChatGPT to fix style and mistakes. And it only got me downvoted because people thought my texts were AI-generated.
Now I just write and post stuff as is. Making mistakes shows you are human, and Reddit values that over your perfect English
P.S. avoid the em dash at all costs, this is a clear sign you used AI (even if you didn t).
If your are curious about my viral post in r/SaaS, you can read it here. By the way, please upvote if you like it!
https://www.reddit.com/r/SaaS/co...
Built the most easy-to-use platform to build and deploy AI call agents — would love thoughts!

Hey everyone,
I recently launched a platform that lets anyone build, customize, and deploy AI-powered call agents in just a few minutes no coding or complicated setup required.
Built an anonymous photo drop tool to let your followers surprise you 👀📸
I just launched a fun side project called DropSnap (https://dropsnap.link) it lets people anonymously send you photos (memes, throwbacks, fashion tips, roasts, confessions, you name it).
I wanted something more visual and fun than all the anonymous text apps out there... so I built it!
No app needed to send. Just a link.
Perfect for creators and IG/TikTok trends.
Example use cases:
Someone drops a photo of you from a night you don t remember
A secret admirer sends you style inspo
Your friends roast your 2016 haircut
Or someone sends a pic that says everything they couldn't
Try it here: https://dropsnap.link
Would love feedback! Also curious:
What s the wildest thing someone could anonymously send you in a photo?
Launched Yawmly - my first ever productivity PWA (solo project)
I am a student and at the starting days of this month, I felt the need of a day planner app to organize my study sessions and goals. Searched for such an app and was unable to find the perfect one. So, as a developer, I couldn't help myself. Started the project planning from this really simple thought - "a table like structure where I could plan my overall day by timestamps and add remarks to each session". After a week of sleepless nights, the final product was ready - it completely exceeded my initial targets and expectations. From day planning and whole day overview reports, D-Day counters to offline support, automatic sync, daily wake-up notification reminders and much more - Yawmly has it all! Would love it if you check it out @Yawmly

Request for product: voice-based dev environment
Here's my hacked-together, messy, voice-based dev environment:
Voice-driven loop with screen-shotting so the LLM in the loop can see what's in my terminal and editor. The prompt varies depending on what I'm trying to drive with this loop.
A few tool definitions that give read access to files and URLs.
A tool the LLM can send a block of output to that generates keyboard events, so the LLM can drive any editor/terminal.
A separate process watching a directory and constantly making LLM-driven git commits. (git autosave).
I have some pieces of this running most of the time. But I'm lazy, and doing other stuff, and I also try to use a variety of editors and tools, to see what's good lately. Which ... no stability, so my hacked-together stuff is always broken.
I don't want to replace @Windsurf / @Cursor / Claude code. A seriously good agent and expert-system dev toolkit is a lot of work.








