You thought 2022 was OpenAI’s year. Then came 2023, a year when the pace of AI innovation was set to turbo speed.
ChatGPT had already started to cement itself into the browser bookmarks of young generations and was on to becoming a household name that even your most technically challenged relatives recognized.
Then Google, hoping to claim recognition for all the AI progress it was quietly working on, launched Bard, its ChatGPT competitor that’s powered by the company’s own “it” model, Gemini. But just over a month later, OpenAI reclaimed much of the spotlight with GPT-4.
The newer model is trained on more recent data, understands context much better than its predecessor, and can handle complex instructions. It can take a bar exam and land in the top 10% of test takers (GPT-3.5 scored in the bottom 10%).
With GPT-4 under the hood (and DALL-E 3 added later in the year), ChatGPT crossed 100 million weekly users before 2023 was over. What's more, there are thousands of products and bots that were built with GPT-4 and GPT-4 Turbo this year, including some of the other 2023 Product of the Year nominees.
Those nominees created some of the best productivity features and most useful applications of generative AI that we saw in 2023, from Arc Browser’s AI file renaming to Notion’s AI database autofill.
Perhaps 2024 is the year OpenAI will make room on the podium for another competitor, but Sam Altman has proven he’s not budging.
The best in each category
We often times say that tools are a developer’s best friend, and in 2023 that was no different. In a year marked by massive technological innovation, the software engineering industry embraced the change by incorporating technologies like AI into their tools to automate things like code reviews and debugging processes. All in an effort to make developer’s lives that bit easier.
Big companies like Github threw their hat in the ring with Copilot X. Smaller teams also had their say, like one of this year’s runners-up: Warp.
Two engineering themes in 2023 that continued from previous years include making APIs easier and creating tools that help shorten the gap that exists between developers and other teams (often marketing, if we're being honest). Resend exists at the intersection of these two persisting trends: a tool for developers to build, test, and deliver transactional emails at scale.
It’s been a rollercoaster year for design tools. Like many of their counterparts, design tool companies had to adapt to a quickly changing industry with the rise of AI. Coupled with the doomed Adobe-Figma acquisition, it felt like the industry was always in the news.
Design tools launched in plenty last year, but some stood out more than others. Ones that zoned in on collaboration, AI integration, and animation were rewarded by the community for their innovation.
This year's nominations reflect that. Jitter, the winner, makes animation accessible to the masses, and Framer AI allows you to spin up a landing page in minutes.
What is the future of the no-code category now that generative AI is here? That’s the question the finalists had us asking now that plain English can generate a whole website in an instant.
The winner of this category also uniquely reminds us that just because something is quick doesn’t mean it has to be dirty. Bento reimagined personal websites and link-in-bio pages to be rich, beautiful places on the internet that function well, too.
“That's so much better than the boxy buttons and flat grids we see in other link-in-bio tools,” thought the Product Hunt community as it catapulted Bento to the 7th most upvoted product of 2023. Linktree agreed, and it acquired Bento later in the year.