p/general
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Nika
For years, I ve been hearing that we re a mobile-first (or even mobile-only) society.
Smartphones are portable. We spend the most time on them.Distribution via App Store / Play Store is huge.
So logically You should build for mobile, right?
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Rohan Chaubey
When you re browsing the Product Hunt leaderboard or checking out top launches, which category of products actually makes you stop and click?
Example, yesterday @lazverry told me on my forum thread that they are a creator, so they spend a lot of time looking into Design & Creatives and Productivity.
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p/magic-lasso-adblock
Matthew Bickham
We've objectively tested Safari, Chrome, Firefox, and Edge to determine which offers the best:
Speed,
Standards Compliance,
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Joey
We are currently looking for some new possibilities in the AI era, and browsers seem to be a good starting point. What capabilities do you think browsers should have in the AI era? Or, will browsers still exist in the future?
I'd like to share my thoughts first. I believe an AI browser should be a small AI OS:
Excellent reading experience, with summarization and generalization capabilities.
AI Agent capabilities, with the ability to automate most operations and predict behavior.
An AI Agent Store, replacing the current plugin system.
A good AI browser is a good MCP Services.
A good AI browser must have excellent privacy management features.
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p/chatgpt
Aaron O'Leary
@OpenAI just launched ChatGPT Atlas, its own browser for macOS that bakes the model right into every tab. You can highlight text to summarize or rewrite it, chat alongside any site, and keep the AI open in a split view while you browse.
It even remembers what you ve been doing over time, though that s already raising privacy flags.
What s interesting is that Atlas doesn t feel like a new product it just feels like ChatGPT trying to absorb the browser itself.
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p/horse
Jake Crump
I've been using @Google Chrome for years and honestly never thought much about changing. It just always seemed like the best and easiest option. Lately though, I've been feeling like maybe I'm missing out. Chrome doesn't feel like the no-brainer pick anymore, and I'm seeing more and more interesting browsers out there.
Currently, @Horse is my top pick. This is the one I'm most interested in trying out, but it also seems like a pretty different approach. I don't necessarily want my productivity to dip, but that may just be inevitable whenever switching.
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Namrata Dutta
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Pablo Fatas
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I tried to pick a few that help me with work (e.g. summarising something, fixing or improving the process).Here are my must-haves:
Buyerstage bookmarking LinkedIn posts
ColorZilla to pick colours from websites (a must for graphics work)
Grammarly grammar checking and grammar correction
Save Tweets Forever bookmarking Twitter posts
SimilarWeb for a quick overview of website stats
SurfPal a time tracker to keep screen time in check
TidyRead AI summarising texts from websites
Tweet Hunter analysing Twitter posts and profiles
Of course, I have more, but these are essential to me.
26
p/producthunt
I ve been on this platform for almost three years without interruption, reviewing dozens of products every day. I try many of them, but only a few have become part of my daily routine, ones I can t imagine living without.
I will pin, for example, 3 of them:
@TabMagic - Bookmark & Tab Manager I no longer need 500 tabs open; I can save them to my dashboard and close my entire browser.
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Manas Sharma
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p/dia-browser
Chris Messina
The maker of Dia and @Arc has been acquired by Atlassian, maker of @Jira and @confluence .
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John Koo
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Abadesi
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p/dockhunt
I was recently reminded of @Dockhunt and how fun it was to see what kinds of apps different folks kept in their dock. I remember it being a cool way to discover some new products I hadn't seen before. I'm also just a big fan of desktop apps over web apps. I find it a lot easier to stay focused when I'm flipping between apps vs flipping between tabs.
These are the apps in my dock:
@Google Chrome - Pretty basic. I've really been considering switching over to @Horse though.
@Slack - The de facto option.
@Superhuman - Maybe the fastest I've become a fan of a product. I think I was pushing it on others within a few hours.
@Notion - Great for documentation and collaborating. I also use it personally for tracking books I read and video games I play, along with tracking personal projects.
Notion Calendar - The menu bar aspect of this is really what sold me. It makes it so much easier to stay on top of my meetings every day.
@Linear - We just recently switched over to Linear here at @Product Hunt and I've been loving it. Pro tip: if you prefer the desktop app, there's a setting to open links in the app, but you can only set that option through the web version.
@iTerm2 - I've tried others, but this is my favorite. This + @Neovim is just
@Claude by Anthropic - This has been my LLM of choice for a while, and I really like having it as a desktop app. Especially the keyboard shortcut to quickly bring it up and ask something.
@Tandem - Super easy to stay in touch and sync with teammates. Incredibly useful for a remote team.
@Spotify - I typically have a YouTube video on in the background, but if I'm writing or doing something more focused, I'll typically have some kind of Jazz going.
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Sharath Kuruganty
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Ben Griese
Yesterday @fmerian recommended Googly Eyes from @Sindre Sorhus, which I immediately downloaded! After enjoying the eyes following my cursor around for the day, that got me thinking - what other fun, goofy apps do you all have for your Mac, Chrome, or other devices that don't necessarily serve a purpose other than to bring joy and break the monotony? @Scroll Buddy is another one that comes to mind that I have saved in a collection.
We see productivity apps, AI-based software, open-source products, etc. all the time, but what about your saved products someone made after their 9-5 or on a weekend just to have fun and test their skills?
mariaterzi
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Aditya
Lakshya Singh
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