September 5th, 2025
RIP your screentime
This newsletter was brought to you byWispr FlowCut to the Chase
gm legends, happy Friday.
Here’s today’s lineup: CapCut AI Studio brings script generation, avatars, autocuts, captions, and more into the editor creators already live in; Katalog turns your reading list into interactive audio you can question and annotate; Guitar Wiz gives players chords, progressions, a tuner, and backing tracks, built with full accessibility in mind.
P.S. Building something new? Tell us about it → editorial@producthunt.co 🫶
Doomscrolling on Steroids

CapCut AI Suite adds a full stack of smart tools to the editor creators already love. You get script generation, video and image creation, avatars, autocuts, captions, translations, and more, all baked into the same mobile workflow that made CapCut a staple for TikTok and beyond.
🔥 Our Take: CapCut has been the default video editor for creators who want speed over ceremony. Now it’s giving them even fewer excuses to slow down. Write an idea, drop it in, and the software handles the busywork. The result is obvious: more videos, more often. Whether that’s inspiring or terrifying depends on how many short-form clips you can handle in your feed.
Chords Without the Pain

Guitar Wiz packs a full chord library with every position, inversion, and audio preview. It also has a tuner, metronome, chord progression builder, sheet-music scanner, and a song maker with bass and drum backing. Works across iPhone, iPad, and Mac, and it’s fully accessible for blind and visually impaired players.
🔥 Our Take: Most beginners remember the same struggles: chord shapes that never sounded right, progressions you couldn’t recall, and wishing for a bandmate who’d play along without rolling their eyes. This app checks those boxes. It teaches, backs you up, and spares you some of that early frustration. If it had been around sooner, half of us might have actually stuck with lessons.
Are you really still typing?

Full disclosure: Wispr Flow is the AI dictation tool most of us at Product Hunt (use we still have a few holdout typers, what romantics). Hold a key, talk, and clean text drops straight into whatever app you're already in — Slack, email, Notion, your IDE, wherever your cursor lives. No switching windows. No copy-paste ritual. Just say the thing – yes, you can whisper it – and even your most run-on sentences will be turned into polished writing at 4x the speed of typing.
Read Later, Out Loud

Katalog is a read-later app that turns your saved articles into interactive audio. It doesn’t just narrate text, it adds image descriptions, lets you ask questions while you listen, and gives you a way to take notes on the go. It’s built to make that endless queue of saved links a little less doomed.
🔥 Our Take: Everyone has a reading list that’s basically a junk drawer. You save an article because future-you will definitely read it, then future-you never does. This flips the script: instead of pretending you’ll find time to sit down, you let the app read it to you and even chat about it. It’s a little like having a friend nag you through your backlog, only this friend actually knows what’s in it.
Inside Warp’s Engine Room

Aloke, Warp’s very first engineer, is running an AMA. He’s been leading the push into “agentic coding” at Warp and just shipped a batch of new features to make working with agents feel less like magic and more like teamwork: code review panel, file editor, file tree, slash commands, and WARP.md.
He’s opening the floor to questions on why this set of features came first, how Warp is evolving, and what the future of coding looks like when humans and agents pair up.
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