Launching today

A.S.S.H.O.L.E.™
Brutally honest. Surprisingly helpful.
4 followers
Brutally honest. Surprisingly helpful.
4 followers
A.S.S.H.O.L.E.™ (Assertive Systems Sidekick for Human Operations, Logic & Efficiency) is your AI-powered second brain. It remembers what matters, proactively reminds you of what you've forgotten, connects information across your work and life, and isn't afraid to challenge questionable decisions. Less like a chatbot, more like the brutally honest friend who keeps you organized, focused, and one step ahead. Your memory, upgraded.




Visla
Hey Product Hunters thank you for checking out A.S.S.H.O.L.E.™ 😃
It turns out the dumbest ideas are sometimes the most useful.
Yes, the acronym was absolutely intentional.
I created this as a parody of the AI industry, where every week seems to bring another "revolutionary" assistant that's supposedly going to organize your life, optimize your workflow, and solve all your problems.
That said, I'd be lying if I said I wouldn't actually use this.
An AI that remembers everything, challenges bad decisions, reminds me what I forgot, and occasionally says, "That's a terrible idea." Sign me up.
I'd genuinely love your feedback:
What's your favorite fake feature?
Would you actually use an AI that's brutally honest?
And what should A.S.S.H.O.L.E.™ do next?
Thanks for stopping by, and if this made you laugh, then the launch was a success. 🍻
FYI - my entire video was made using Visla's Director Mode feature! Pretty cool!
Respect the self-awareness here - the parody framing is genuinely funny and the critique of "revolutionary assistant" launches is fair. My honest concern is that the joke and the product are doing different jobs. The name gets you traffic on day one but makes it almost impossible to recommend to a colleague without a long explanation. "You should try this tool, it's called A.S.S.H.O.L.E." is a tough sell in most work contexts. The actual use case - an AI that challenges bad decisions and remembers what you said - is real and worth building. Just wonder if the branding becomes a ceiling rather than a launchpad.