Can t believe how far we ve come since the original launch here, in Product Hunt. None of this momentum would be possible without your feedback and support .
Today, a few new updates are live across the Extension and Web App.
Lately, I ve been thinking about how different it feels to build and connect on smaller community platforms compared to the massive social networks. Smaller spaces often feel more personal, supportive, and genuine, but of course, they come with a smaller reach.
So I m curious: Do you prefer the vibe of smaller, niche platforms, or do you still focus on growing on the big ones? What makes a smaller community worth your time? Would you switch to a newer platform if it offered more meaningful engagement, even with fewer users?
We got some questions about connecting your repository to start identifying risks in your dependencies so here's a super easy guide with screenshots to get you up and running with Trace-AI!
In this post, I will cover only the first point to keep it concise.
First of all, yes, there are still companies and projects that make a development with a designed app or website, i.e., in Figma, but without even making a design system with buttons, labels, and so on. And don t make me wrong, it's possible to make a small project without even a design at all, like we did. But when you're making a bigger project, it becomes super messy. You always need to create new components; it takes time, it slows you down, and it's not looking consistent.
I ve mentioned several times that I see Product Hunt as a social platform, and I can say that over the past almost 3 years, it has helped me in several ways, for example:
Meeting founders and finding a community where I feel among ambitious people Getting first access to innovative tech products Gaining publicity being regularly present made me more visible
So how can all of this be converted into increased credibility?
We've all been there. You give an AI a big, complex task like "write a market analysis," "create a content calendar," "draft a project proposal", and you get back... a giant, unstructured wall of text
Today I celebrate a big milestone. 365 days in a row active on Product Hunt. Honestly, quite a number given how many things happened in my life this year, it feels like I could write a book about it.
But consistency takes effort. Here are 3 things that helped me:
I m about to launch my product, ViralSort 2.0, and I m exploring whether to launch with a Product Hunt hunter or do it on my own. I ve launched a few products both with hunters and independently, but I m still not convinced which approach truly drives more visibility, engagement, or traction. Has anyone tried launching with a hunter? Did it make a noticeable difference, or would you recommend submitting independently? I d love to hear your experiences, insights, or even lessons learned from both approaches!
Hey Hunters & Builders! We've been building and evolving a simple but powerful workspace platform to manage knowledge and power AI agents. Over the course of the next few weeks, we'll be announcing big updates to further position Portals to be a place where users and AI collaborate to do complex tasks. This includes both user-facing and internal tasks across roles like sales, marketing, product, and support. This is accomplished with a robust, no-code agent building process that's simpler than anything on the market.
Please stay tuned for updates through email and our website!
GraphBit is a high-performance AI agent framework built on a Rust core with seamless Python bindings. It blends Rust s speed and reliability with Python s flexibility, enabling developers to create intelligent, enterprise-grade agents effortlessly.
I wanted to see if Gemini s AI app builder could handle something real. I needed a fast way to generate estimates without paying for a clunky CRM, so I built a simple tool called QuiqEst. It takes natural language and spits out a clean, downloadable estimate or invoice.
It actually works but what I m more curious about is: has anyone else here built working tools with Gemini? Did you hit any limitations or cool breakthroughs?
I'm about to open an online music instrument store, and building the store has been challenging due to several changes in programmers during the process and numerous delays. However, I can now finally see the light at the end of the tunnel.
I miss Mint. And when I say that, I mean that I miss the old Mint before they got acquired by Intuit and started selling my data to anyone who would buy it. I want more than what my bank offers but this space seems surprisingly quiet unless I am hiding under a rock.