Many of you sometimes write to me in DMs asking how to position yourself on Product Hunt.
From the question, I always get the feeling that people want to speed up the process, publish something quickly, get a high position in the ranking of launched products and a badge. But this is a long-term game.
You just finished a brainstorm session. The whiteboard is covered in boxes, arrows, and brilliant ideas. Now what? Redraw it all in Figma? Spend an hour translating it to a prototype? With TypMo's Image-to-IA feature, you can snap a photo and get a working wireframe in under a minute. The AI recognizes common wireframe conventions: an X in a box becomes an image placeholder, circles become avatars, rows of lines become tables. Write "Search" next to a rectangle and it becomes a search bar. Your napkin sketch becomes a clickable prototype before your coffee gets cold. Check this 20 second Sketch to Wireframe video Tips for Better Imports
Use high contrast Black marker on white paper works best. Faded dry-erase markers confuse the AI.
Label your components Write "Logo", "Search", or "Button" next to your drawings. The AI reads your handwriting.
Photograph straight-on Avoid angles that distort proportions. Good lighting reduces shadows.
Show structure clearly Draw lines to separate Header, Main, and Footer areas. Group related items with boxes.
Start simple Import the core layout first, then add details in the editor. Lets go!!!
Hollywood started panicking because of this Netflix X Warner Bros acquisition.
I m deeply immersed in cinematography, and to me, this feels like proof that theatres could decline even further as people continue to favour streaming. I m also questioning what this means for content quality. Fewer major producers could create more room for monopolies and potential price wars, and I think we can expect subscription prices to rise as a result.
This question is semi-philosophical, but I recall my ex-classmate she had quite rich parents and really didn't need to work. As an only child, she had everything first (all technology, all pricy vacations, they even bought her own flat in 18 + car). Since she had a lot of money from her parents and a lot of free time, she only enjoyed life (some dr*gs and other stuff). As a person, she didn't look like someone who would appreciate money or time at all because it was "normal" to have everything from all above mentioned.
(And I don't want to sound bad, but I honestly don't know what skill she would have that she could use to make a living - the only thing she was really good at was being sassy, which, oddly enough, earned some people's respect.)
We're into the last week of November, which is a little nuts to me. It feels like last week we rang in the 2025 new year celebrations. There's been a ton of new products launch this year, unsurprisingly a lot of them with "AI" in their name. What product or products stood out to you the most?
For me it has to be @Wispr Flow, it's completely changed the game on how I interact with my devices, I rarely find myself typing anymore. Even this post was dictated through Wispr Flow.
We're into the last week of November, which is a little nuts to me. It feels like last week we rang in the 2025 new year celebrations. There's been a ton of new products launch this year, unsurprisingly a lot of them with "AI" in their name. What product or products stood out to you the most?
For me it has to be @Wispr Flow, it's completely changed the game on how I interact with my devices, I rarely find myself typing anymore. Even this post was dictated through Wispr Flow.
TechCrunch shared an excerpt from a roughly 30-minute panel featuring Sam Altman, where he mentioned that within the next two years, they plan to introduce hardware built by their AI company.
It s supposed to be: "screenless" and pocket-sized offering a calmer experience than smartphones
avoiding constant notifications and attention overload