Launched this week
JustVibe is a free search engine, built to help get things done. Search "plan my 5 day trip to tokyo" and instantly receive a fully functional and interactive trip planner, perfectly set up for Tokyo and running directly in your browser. If your perfect app doesn't exist yet, JustVibe builds a custom one for your exact needs in minutes. Every app is yours to keep forever, with zero code. Chat to customize every detail and share your new app with a single link.











Congrats on the launch! Q - When an app gets generated from a search, does it live permanently in your library the way a saved document would, or does it expire if you don't come back to it?
JustVibe
Thanks@uddipta Apps never expire on @JustVibe. You can save any app into your "Library". You can go back to any app in your "Library" any time you want. Even if you just have the url to this app, the url would work for ever.
How does JustVibe ensure that user-created apps remain accurate, reliable, and useful over time as the underlying information changes?
JustVibe
That's a good question@rod_sodax Apps on JustVibe are not just UI. Apps are built with sophisticated backend, with the capabilities to search / browse the latest web, to generate creativity assets, to fetch the real time data from stock market, to access the massive commerce inventories, and many many more. So when an app loads for a user, it leverages the capabilities it's armed with and provides the most useful information it could to the user.
The “search engine for doing” line is interesting. When someone comes in with a vague task, like a marketing workflow or a small internal tool, does JustVibe first clarify the goal, or does it jump straight into building an app? Since the page mentions AI Workflow Automation, Engineering & Development, and Marketing & Sales, I’m wondering how much the product adapts its questions based on the category.
JustVibe
@crystalmei Good question! Many searches on JustVibe (like the ones with vague intent) do not land you on an app directly, but instead the result page includes quick answers on different directions for the topic, and suggestions on the interactive apps that you may use.
No export option mentioned? Trip itinerary into calendar would help."
JustVibe
@aria_turner The apps that involve planning (like a trip planner app) usually have a "save" or "summary" button that would save your app summary (it can be a trip itinerary for a trip planner, or a food recipe for a recipe finder) into you "Library". These summaries are yours to keep. You can come back to them any time you want. Exporting your plan to your calendar app (like google calendar) is coming soon.
How will you handle apps that need external services? Simple connections with popular platforms could make the finished apps much more useful.
JustVibe
Very good point!@akshay_shyam
Apps on @JustVibe are built with the capabilities to browser and use the entire web, and to perform third party integrations. So the connection to external services vary app-by-app. For example, this "hotels in Tokyo that are close to metro" app integrates with third party services to gather hotel information useful to the user journey.
Some apps also have share / export functionalities that allow you to export to a third party service through your device's native integrations.
The routing call looks really interesting. When a query lands, whats the bar for pulling an existing library app vs building one fresh? Congrats on the launch!
JustVibe
Thanks@artstavenka1!
When trying to match a query in the existing app library, we primarily look at 1) if what an app was built for matches the query's intent (e.g. to create a travel itinerary for the next trip) and 2) if an app satisfy all the requirements from the query (e.g. a query may say "allow me to specify my interests like food and culture" or "allow me to customize my plan by easily swap out each item on the plan").
JustVibe would serve you an existing app if it perfectly match these requirements, otherwise you can choose to build one specific to your need or chose from a list of existing apps that are your closest matches.
the library-reuse vs custom-build split is the interesting part - what's actually deciding whether a search gets served from the existing app library vs triggers a fresh build? similarity match on the prompt itself?
JustVibe
@sabber_ahamed When finding a match from the existing app library, we primarily look at 1) if what an app was built for matches the query's intent (e.g. to create a travel itinerary for the next trip) and 2) if an app satisfy all the requirements from the query (e.g. "allow me to specify my interests like food and culture" in the query).
Just like Google has a huge index of the pages on the web, @JustVibe has an index of a massive app library.