Most NFT marketplaces look powerful but feel intimidating. Wallet jargon, gas fees, confusing mint flows, and crowded listings often create friction before a user even completes their first action. For experienced Web3 users, this complexity is manageable. For everyone else, it becomes a barrier.
In this Idea Usher review, an independent technology services reviewer takes a practical look at Gruve, an NFT marketplace built to simplify how creators mint assets and how collectors discover and purchase them. Instead of chasing experimental mechanics or speculative trends, the platform focuses on clarity, scalability, and trust. This Idea Usher review approaches Gruve as a product system, not a launch announcement, breaking down how the marketplace behaves for real users rather than how it markets itself.
I have a small startup and I'm looking for advice/guidance.
I have been working the past 1.5 years on a no code tool to build whatsapp bots. In general this is something like n8n (but not close yet in scale, and focussed on whatsapp bots).
I currently have about 5 bots integrated with WhatsApp and running in production (only one paying customer so far). These include
Hey everyone I m a solo founder and recently launched a small SaaS on Product Hunt.
The problem I was personally obsessed with: YouTube creators get a lot of comments but most insights are buried under noise. People scroll endlessly, reply randomly, and still miss what viewers are repeatedly asking for.
I'm excited to share Alex Prompt a revolutionary AI-powered prompt engineering assistant designed to help developers, content creators, and AI enthusiasts maximize their productivity and creativity.
What makes Alex Prompt special:
Smart Prompt Optimization Transform your raw ideas into perfectly crafted prompts that get better results from AI models
I ve been working on a visual thinking tool called nodal. It started as a way to explore ideas freely and then turn that thinking into something shareable without rebuilding everything into slides or docs.
I m curious how other people here handle ideas that don t start linear. Do you stick with notes? Whiteboard apps? Something else? I'm one of those neurodivergent folks and for me thinking doesn't always go in a straight line, but I do need to keep things organized.
Your network already moves tickets. Group chats. Stories. "Yo come through." But when payout time hits, nobody can prove who actually sold what.
Subzii connects the sale to the source. Organizers stop guessing. Promoters stop chasing. Everyone sees the same numbers, same dashboard, earnings updating live
We built this for the people who fill rooms but never had receipts.
I have seen companies keep getting hit with surprise LLM bills, retry loops, users spamming AI features, and no way to know which customer caused a cost spike. So I started building TokenTrail to fix it for myself and figured others might have the same problem.
What it does:
Set hard budget limits that kill requests at $X (no more Monday morning surprises, though customisable from the user side)
Track cost per customer, not just total API spend
See what each step in a multi-agent workflow actually costs
Basic smart routing to cheaper models for simple queries