Product Hunt is best known for its homepage, a daily leaderboard of the most creative and innovative products on the internet. Makers go all out to win launch day, because that visibility matters. Product Hunt also plays a significant role in how products appear in Google search results.
What surprised us was that AI assistants like ChatGPT were rarely citing Product Hunt in product recommendations.
Learning to code or learning how to use AI is important, but what matters even more is learning how to solve problems we haven t even discovered yet.
Recently, I read an article featuring Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, where he said: Nothing would give me more joy than if none of our engineers were coding at all, and they were just purely solving undiscovered problems.
China's new top paid app doesn't help you find a ride, order food, or socialize with friends. It just asks you whether you're alive.
The app, which translates to "Are You Dead Yet?" the presence of the "yet" suggests the developer probably isn't on the Bryan Johnson "don't die" train...yet) requires you to log in daily and click a button to show you're alive. Miss two days in a row and the app will notify your emergency contact. That's it. That's the app.
On Product Hunt, I can see many people launching their products using "vibe-coding tools" like @Lovable , @bolt.new , or@Replit
I reckon many people who created something with them are usually developers who didn't have enough time for building a side idea before, but with AI, they could make it happen.