Launching today
Breadcromb
A browser that remembers everything and can act on anything
25 followers
A browser that remembers everything and can act on anything
25 followers
Your AI shouldn't start from scratch every time. Trace is the browser that remembers everything you've read, understands your work, and gives AI the context to help you research, write, and automate tasks without sacrificing privacy.
Products used by Breadcromb
Explore the tech stack and tools that power Breadcromb. See what products Breadcromb uses for development, design, marketing, analytics, and more.
LLMs 1
LLMs 1

ChatGPT by OpenAIGet answers. Find inspiration. Be more productive.
4.8 (687 reviews)
ChatGPT became our go-to tool for product strategy, technical architecture, UX brainstorming, and research. It combines strong reasoning with fast iteration, making it invaluable for both engineering and product decisions throughout Trace's development.
Engineering & Development 3
Engineering & Development 3

Claude CodeAnthropic’s deep-context AI coder
5.0 (564 reviews)
Claude Code consistently performs better on large and complex tasks. Its ability to understand an entire codebase, follow complex instructions, and maintain context over long coding sessions made it our primary AI development tool.

SupabaseThe open source Firebase alternative
5.0 (837 reviews)
We chose Supabase because it provides everything we needed in one platform: PostgreSQL, authentication, real-time capabilities, storage, and vector search. It allowed us to move quickly while keeping a solid, scalable architecture without managing our own backend infrastructure.

VercelThe frontend cloud. Creators of Next.js.
5.0 (960 reviews)
We chose Vercel because it let us ship the fastest. Deployment is tightly integrated with Git, preview deployments make it easy to review changes, and the serverless/edge infrastructure removes most of the operational overhead for a small team. That lets us focus on building our product instead of managing infrastructure. As our needs evolve, we're open to moving parts of the stack elsewhere if it becomes the better technical or economic choice.