Launched this week

Solveaux
A platform for innovators
8 followers
A platform for innovators
8 followers
Stop losing valuable ideas in chats and scattered notes. Solveaux helps engineers, researchers, founders, and builders document reasoning, share technical knowledge, discuss research, and collaborate on ideas from concept to breakthrough.





Hi Product Hunt! 👋
I'm excited to introduce Solveaux — a social platform for engineers, developers, researchers, and builders to share knowledge through the way they think, not just the results they produce.
Most platforms reward polished outcomes: finished projects, research papers, or final answers. But the experiments, failed attempts, design decisions, and reasoning behind those outcomes are often lost.
Solveaux is built to change that.
On Solveaux you can:
🧠 Share Reasoning logs to explain how you solved a problem step by step.
🔬 Publish and discuss Research Papers.
🚀 Share Breakthroughs, technical updates, launches, and discoveries.
🪐 Create Spaces where communities can collaborate around technologies, research topics, startups, or engineering interests.
Think of it as a place where technical knowledge becomes searchable, discussable, and reusable—not hidden in private notes or scattered across different platforms.
Whether you're solving an engineering challenge, building a startup, conducting research, or exploring new ideas, Solveaux gives you a place to document and share the journey.
I'd love your feedback!
Would you use a platform like this?
What feature would make Solveaux part of your workflow?
Any feedback on overall experience?
Thanks for checking it out, and I hope you enjoy exploring Solveaux! ❤️
How does this compare to just using a shared doc or Notion for capturing and discussing technical ideas, what makes it worth switching for a small team?
How does Solveaux handle version control when an idea branches into multiple directions? Curious if it keeps the original reasoning intact while letting collaborators explore different paths.
How does it actually differ from something like Notion or Obsidian when it comes to documenting engineering reasoning day to day?
Finally tried Solveaux after seeing it mentioned a few times. The timeline view for a technical thread actually made a long debugging conversation make sense afterward, which is more than I expected from a notes app.