This year’s Apple Design Awards winners and finalists

Earlier this month, we recapped all the new, shiny products and features Apple is working on. Today, we’re looking at some of the 2022 Apple Design Awards winners and finalists that the Product Hunt community has supported over the past year.
In the Inclusivity category, Procreate snatched its second award for its new accessibility features such as tremor and motion filtering, an in-app assistive touch menu, audio feedback, and color blindness settings. Other finalists include transcription and live translation for FaceTime app Navi and anagram game Letter Rooms.
Interaction Design winner Slopes uses the GPS on your iPhone or Apple Watch to keep a diary of your skiing and snowboarding. Gibbon (also a Social Impact winner), which we saw launch earlier this year, is “a hopeful game about the beauty of wilderness and the destructive force of human civilization.” Also notable in this category, Transit+ is a multimodal urban travel planning app, while Vectornator’s iPad app lets you design vector graphics.
Shinning a light on crucial issues, Rebel Girls shares the stories of history’s most influential women such as Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Simone Biles, and Frida Kahlo, through rich audio. We wrote more about it here. Empathy and Headspace were also nominated.
As far as Delightful and Fun apps go, (Not Boring) Habits took the stage with its habit-building app. If you’re looking for visually appealing graphics, Halide Mark II is a camera for your iPhone and iPad that offers an intuitive experience to both novices and experienced photographers.
Making use of Apple’s latest technology, Innovation Winners and finalists include Odio’s virtual 3D soundscape and Focus Noodles, an app that helps you focus by not allowing you to touch your phone.
- Struggling to learn Spanish? Try making it fun with memes on memo.
- lapse helps you save instant time-lapse screen recordings on Mac and windows.
- Becoming a dad? Check out this checklist-for-Dads-to-be and you’ve got that “World’s Best Dad” mug in the bag for next Father’s Day.
- Not a big fan of the Hacker News UI? Try this one.

Fifty solo founders were asked to describe SureThing in one word. Nobody said 'tool.' Most said 'co-founder.' That's because it actually does founder work: reads your inbox overnight, drafts the replies, follows up on threads, and has a briefing ready when you wake up. Set it up on your phone in 60 seconds — no code, no APIs, no waiting for an engineer who doesn't exist.

“I've been working on markwhen as a way to easily create, view, and edit timelines based on a simple markdown-like text file," shared maker Rob Koch. "I even used it successfully a few weeks ago for coordinating and sharing a timeline of events surrounding my wedding!”
Got a timeline to build?
Every Sunday
Everything you missed this past week on Product Hunt: Top products, spicy community discourse, key trends on the site, and long-form pieces we’ve recently published.