Cut to the Point
gm legends, happy Wednesday.
Here’s today’s lineup: Supercut makes async updates feel less like homework by letting teams record clean, AI-edited videos with chapters, captions, and summaries that actually get watched; Emergent turns plain English into full-stack apps using coordinated AI agents that plan, code, test, and ship like a real dev team; and Aero Hand Open brings robotics to your desk with a fully 3D-printable, tendon-driven hand you can actually build yourself for around $300.
Look Sharp, Talk Fast

Supercut is an AI-powered video messenger for teams who don’t have time to rehearse. Record updates or pitches, and it automatically adds captions, chapters, and summaries while cleaning up your mistakes. It’s native for macOS and Windows and already used by teams at Perplexity, Framer, and Typeform.
🔥 Our Take: Most of us hate recording ourselves because it’s slow, awkward, and never turns out how we want. Supercut fixes that with smart editing that hides the flubs and polishes the rest. It’s the difference between “uhh… wait, let me redo that” and just hitting send.
What Social Stuff Belongs in “Non-Social” Apps?

Jeff Benson asks: which social features make sense (or don’t) in apps that aren’t built around social? He points to how SoundCloud is adding “Liked by your crew,” “Trending Trackwall,” and user follow recommendations.
Some users say they like lightweight syncs, social tools that add connection without turning every app into a feed. But many push back on aggressive features: linking to contact lists, forced friend graphs, or auto-sharing becomes intrusive fast.
The debate lands somewhere between value and privacy. Social add-ons that let you share when you choose get applause. Those that demand access to your network or auto-broadcast your activity draw eye rolls.
Grow your app with Setapp: revenue, users, & AI

You shipped the app. Now comes the part nobody warns you about.
Billing across dozens of countries. Licensing agreements. Tax compliance. Customer support for users you haven't met yet. And if your app does anything with AI, add provider management and infrastructure costs to the pile. None of that is why you started building — but all of it is now your problem.
Setapp is trying to take it off your plate.
You probably know Setapp as the subscription marketplace — one monthly price, hundreds of Mac apps. On May 21st, they turned toward developers. The pitch is simple: list your app, reach users who are already looking, and let Setapp handle the business layer.
Code Without the Weight

Emergent is an agentic AI platform that takes your idea in plain English and builds full-stack web or mobile apps. It uses multiple agents to plan, code, test, and ship, the way a real engineering team would, without you having to juggle infrastructure or technical setup.
🔥 Our Take: The wild part is watching a prompt evolve into a working app without you having to write boilerplate or fight configs. But underneath that magic is a bet: if the agents can really coordinate and catch their own mistakes, people with ideas (not dev teams) will start building the future.
A Robotic Hand You Can Actually Own

Aero Hand Open is a fully 3D-printable, tendon-driven robotic hand that mimics human movement. It’s modular, runs on ESP32 with ROS2 support, and costs around $300 to build. You can print it, assemble it, and start experimenting, no lab or corporate badge required.
🔥 Our Take: Robotic hands used to be the kind of thing you’d only see in research videos or behind glass at a conference. Now you can literally print one at home. It’s open-source, affordable, and a little wild to think about, the kind of leap that makes robotics feel accessible again.
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Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterday’s top ten launches. That’s it.