Forums
Should the internet be age-gated and ID verified?
So recently the EU implemented digital age verification that caused people to figure out that they could use Death Stranding's photo mode to get around the verification process (lol).
The USA is about to start implementing something similar and Apple is supporting age verification through things like Verify with Wallet API.
The internet has always been the place of "freedom" and safe haven for folks, is this step towards verification something that might eventually change that into a more restricted digital knowledge base?
I'm totally in agreement with moderating how content can be distributed so it's safe for children but for some reason something feels a little off to me about this. I'm curious what everyone thinks!
How do you think these type of policies will impact our future ability to interact with the digital world?
Feature Requests?
Hi everyone!
Is there any feature you d love to see on PopHop? Let us know we re ready to make it happen.
Now it's possible posting to 𝕏 communities
We've added the ability to post directly to X Communities. Now you can easily share with specific groups of people. Just browse your recent communities or search for any community you're part of (public or private), select it while writing your post, and you're good to go. It's a simpler way to reach the right audience without extra steps.

Exciting News: We Just Officially Launched NeuralAgent On MacOS
EXCITING NEWS, We Just Officially Launched NeuralAgent on MacOS!
The future of human-computer interaction is here. Just tell NeuralAgent what you want, and watch it click, type, scroll, and navigate your apps like a human would.
- Natural language commands
- Works with any macOS app
What are your secret productivity hacks?
Working and being productive aren t the same thing.
We often sit in front of the laptop for hours, but between context switching, notifications, and tiny distractions.... we barely get real work done.
Maker’s Corner: Hitting 4th Product of the Day as a Indie Hacker with NO audience
Hi everyone! Please welcome today's Maker's Corner feature, @kian_karazmoudeh , Founder of @YoinkUI
Feel free to chime in below in the comments with questions on his product or journey or anything else that comes to mind!
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Tell us about what your product is and what makes it special?
YoinkUI lets you copy any UI component from any web page and converts it to react + tailwind so you can use it in your own projects. What makes us unique is It doesn't rely on AI to "try" and replicate the UI, it gets the styles directly.
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What inspired you to build your product? What problem were you trying to solve when you built it? Has that evolved?
I ve made many AI wrappers in my indie hacking journey, and most of them flopped hard. This month I launched YoinkUI to do just one simple thing. The crazy part is that sooo many people actually loved the idea and resonated with the pain of dealing with AI slop.
As a solo developer, I found myself spending way too much time focusing on UI, rather than creating features that actually matter. Everytime I tried to ask AI, it came up with generic and boring styles. So I thought to myself, I wish I could just take an existing landing page and modify it to fit my needs. That's how YoinkUI was born.
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What s a feature or detail you obsessed over that most users will never notice but you're really proud of?
Most DOMs contain hundreds of invisible elements that don't affect the UI. Coming up with a mechanism that removes all those elements without breaking the layout of the page proved to be more difficult than I anticipated. This is one of those features which you won't notice is there, until it's not. Then you'll definitely notice.
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What s something that didn t make it into your product for this launch, but you'd like to build?
I want to add an AI agent to help with updating the copy and styles of the yoinked page/component. So you Yoink a landing page and tell the agent "hey change the copy to match my own product, and make the theme purple" and it will do it.
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Is this your first product? If not, what else have you built, or are currently working on?
This is my second product. I realized the need to build YoinkUI while building my first product actually. It was a competitor marketing analysis tool, but I abandoned the project.
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What s your secret weapon or go-to when you get stuck while building?
Going for a walk or taking a shower always helps me clear my mind and oftentimes the solution comes to me instantly afterwards.
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When did you decide to launch on Product Hunt, and how did you prep for it? Do you have any advice for someone thinking about launching?
I had been thinking of launching for a while. I was very confident in my product so I launched within a few hours notice. It hasn t even been a month yet and I ve gotten 1000 users. My reddit launch post went viral getting 200k views. I placed 4th product of the day on Product Hunt, despite basically having no audience.
In hindsight I wish I had set up a teaser page for a few days, and promoted my launch on my site and told some friends. That's exactly what I recommend people do.
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What's the most surprising or unexpected learning and/or feedback you've received?
Sometimes the things that seem obvious to us, are not to our users. I gained some really valuable insight as to how people use my product by talking to them and the parts of the interface I can make clearer.
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Share a few Products and/or Makers that inspire you and why.
@jackfriks and @marclou are huge inspirations. Love their enthusiasm and energy and the way they tackle problems.
What piece of advice would you give graduates and high school students to prepare them for future?
The world is changing rapidly due to AI and technology.
New generations (and not only they) have to adapt to changes in the job market.
I know that many of us at PH have a founder mindset.
We Got into YC, Got Kicked Out, and Fought Our Way Back

This story is being published in the Product Hunt Weekly Newsletter. If you'd like to read more stories like this, subscribe here.
We Got into YC, Got Kicked Out, and Fought Our Way Back

This story is being published in the Product Hunt Weekly Newsletter. If you'd like to read more stories like this, subscribe here.
✅ POLL: Do you buy the domain first or build the product first?
Let s settle this once and for all.
Do you spend 3 hours trying to find a clever .com before writing a single line of code? Or do you ship the MVP and slap on whatever domain wasn t taken at the time?
Cast your vote and tell us why.
✅ POLL: Do you buy the domain first or build the product first?
Let s settle this once and for all.
Do you spend 3 hours trying to find a clever .com before writing a single line of code? Or do you ship the MVP and slap on whatever domain wasn t taken at the time?
Cast your vote and tell us why.
Which platform do you consider trustworthy when reading product reviews?
Whenever I m about to buy something (especially something more expensive), I can be easily influenced by recommendations from people I trust and know. That might be well-known accounts on X or suggestions from friends.
Or, I go and read the reviews.
AI in your IDE (e.g. Cursor) vs AI in your terminal (Claude Code) — what’s the better flow?
AI coding tools seem to come in two main flavors: IDE-based, like @Cursor and @GitHub Copilot, and terminal-based setups, like using @Claude Code to generate commands, scripts, or entire files. Both have their fans, but which one actually helps you move faster?
Curious what flow people are sticking with long term, and where you see the most gains (or frustrations).
AI in your IDE (e.g. Cursor) vs AI in your terminal (Claude Code) — what’s the better flow?
AI coding tools seem to come in two main flavors: IDE-based, like @Cursor and @GitHub Copilot, and terminal-based setups, like using @Claude Code to generate commands, scripts, or entire files. Both have their fans, but which one actually helps you move faster?
Curious what flow people are sticking with long term, and where you see the most gains (or frustrations).








