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Happy New Year Producthunt, wish you all have a great start in 2026🎇
Creaibo is launching today ringing in the new year with a new product
It feels like the perfect way to close one chapter and begin another. Wishing all of you smooth sailing and success with your own products in the coming year.
Here's Creaibo, a content AI co-pilot that finally gets you
Hi product hunt, this is Rylynn from Creaibo
We're triny to solves a core problem: significantly boosts creative efficiency and content quality, without losing our consistent style no matter the format, be it blogs, long/short video, or any visual-text posts.
AI co-pilot for creators who refuse to sound like everyone else.
Hey, I'm Rylynn, the founder of Creaibo AI.
Our little creation is officially out in the world today, and I'm equal parts excited and nervous!
For years, I've been stuck between two frustrating options: either spend hours tweaking prompts for generic AI content, or miss out on the efficiency boost altogether. I built Creaibo to break that cycle.
Hi there, the first vibe-creating AI is going to launch Friday!
Great to be here on Product Hunt really looking forward to connecting with everyone this Friday
But before that, I d love to share the story behind our product.
Imagine a grassland with limited resources, where a flock of sheep graze freely. As herders, our role is to maintain a balance between the grass and the growth of the sheep
Then one day, a new kind of herder arrives. Using new technology, they quickly replicate identical bionic sheep that consume grass at an overwhelming rate. Before long, more herders adopt the same approach. Soon, the pasture becomes overcrowded with sheep that all look and act the same until the grass is completely grazed down.
Who do you think should be the new CEO of Apple?
Tim Cook is approaching retirement, and it is obvious he cannot hold this position indefinitely.
Tim has led the company since 2011 and helped it grow from a $350B company to a $4T giant. However, they are currently having a problem and are stagnating even in AI.
How I spent ten years on 18 projects to understand the fundamental rule of startups
My journey in startups began 10 years ago, and I've launched 18 startups, most of which failed. Briefly on why they failed:
1. Contract Online my first startup in 2015, which was supposed to be an online service for remote signing of contracts for any transactions between individuals. A kind of analogue of a secure transaction. For this startup, I even managed to attract a business angel who invested $16,500.
Reason for failure: I had two lawyers on my team who discovered in the process that the legal framework at the time could not provide reliable grounds for protecting our users in remote transactions. The contracts would not have been considered legally signed.
2. Natural Products In 2015-2018, I became very passionate about healthy eating, but in the process, I discovered that products in all chain stores are full of chemicals, and stores with truly natural products are inaccessible to the majority. Hence, the idea emerged to create my own online platform where you could order natural products directly from farmers at affordable prices.
Reason for failure: For several years, I tried to launch this project, even trained as a baker of natural bread and tried to create my own farm, but in the process, I found that few people are willing to pay for truly natural products, even if these products were only 20-30% more expensive than market prices, and not 2-3 times more, as in premium stores. Hence, the market was so small that all my attempts were doomed.

Would you trust AI to reply to your emails yet?
Like a lot of you, I live in Gmail all day. Clients, community members, investors, team updates, random newsletters I swear I never subscribed to, it s chaos.
I was spending 2 3 hours just replying to people. And every AI email tool I tried told me the same thing:
Just move your entire workflow to our new shiny email app! or drastically changed my Gmail UI.
Would you pay more for a product with great support?
Most people think users choose products based on features or price. In reality, support decides who stays.
A cheaper tool becomes expensive fast when every issue turns into a ticket nightmare. Meanwhile, teams keep paying more for products that solve problems and support them when it matters.
Support is not a cost. It is part of the product experience. Fast replies build trust. Clear answers reduce churn. Companies that treat support as a growth lever win.
I really wonder these questions
Would you pay more for a product with great support?
Most people think users choose products based on features or price. In reality, support decides who stays.
A cheaper tool becomes expensive fast when every issue turns into a ticket nightmare. Meanwhile, teams keep paying more for products that solve problems and support them when it matters.
Support is not a cost. It is part of the product experience. Fast replies build trust. Clear answers reduce churn. Companies that treat support as a growth lever win.
I really wonder these questions
How do you approach Context Engineering when building with OpenAI models?
Lately, I have been experimenting with how to feed context into GPT models more effectively.
For example, when fine-tuning or working with larger context windows, I have noticed that the dilemma is in organizing the surrounding information, rather than the prompt itself. Last week, I came to know that it's called Context Engineering.
🚀 How to build momentum after Launch
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.







