Faisal Ahmed Rony

Faisal Ahmed Rony

Founder of Total InfoHub | Tech & SEO

Forums

Why most AI products feel the same and what it actually takes to feel different

I have been thinking about this a lot lately: why do so many AI products feel interchangeable?

You open one, you open another. Different logo, different color scheme, same experience. A text box. A chat interface. Some version of "ask me anything." The wrapper changes but the feeling does not.

Bildr is shutting down on May 25, 2026

Bildr didn't make it:

An Update on Bildr

Bildr was built on a real belief: that the ability to create software shouldn't require knowing how to write it.

We made meaningful progress on that, and we've had the privilege of watching people build their software and their businesses with Bildr, this has always been what drove us as a team.

But the ground has shifted. The emergence of agentic AI development platforms has created a fundamental change in the relationship between humans and software. The constraint that Bildr was designed to remove is now being removed in different, better ways, and at a pace that Bildr cannot match.

After a lot of consideration, and after years of building, I've made the decision that it is time to close this chapter and to shut Bildr down.

What that means for you:

Studio access to your projects and data, as well as an ability to export all of your data, will be available until May 25, 2026.

Log in to Bildr Studio and use the export option in the Studio header. Everything will be accessible until that date. Please don't wait. After May 25, support will no longer be available.

If your projects in Bildr have real-world customers on them, you will likely receive a direct email from the team offering to help and to show you how to make use of agentic AI development to make migrating off of Bildr much easier. If you don't receive an email from us and you do have live customers on your project, please reach out at support@bildr.com.

If you're on a monthly plan, we've canceled your subscription and you will see no further charges. If you're on an annual plan, you'll receive a pro-rated refund for your remaining months. That will come automatically, with no action needed from you.

Your subscription being canceled does not affect your projects. Everything you've published will continue running normally for your users until May 25th.

After May 25, 2026, Bildr Studio will go offline and all data will be deleted 30 days later.

A Note of Gratitude

Building a better way for non-coders to create software was a mission worth pursuing, and none of this would have been possible without all of you who shared this journey with us. I am deeply grateful for having had the opportunity. Thank you.

Mark

What did you name your Claw?

10,000+ people named their @KiloClaw bot and fun fact looking at the data: 4 people named theirs HAL 9000.

We let AI write our code for a week. Here is what actually happened.

Everyone is talking about vibe coding right now. Let AI handle the code while you focus on the vision. It sounds revolutionary. So we tried it.

For one week, our team at Murror used AI coding tools for everything. New features, bug fixes, refactoring. We wanted to see if it could genuinely speed up our development cycle or if the hype was getting ahead of reality.

Interactive Product Demo Platforms For SaaS Teams

A lot of demo calls happen too early.

People book them just to understand the basics, so sales teams repeat the same walkthrough again and again.

Rankfenderp/rankfenderImed Radhouani

26d ago

I asked AI to Build a Competitor to My Own Product. It Did. Here’s What I Learned.

Last month, I did something that felt slightly insane.

I took our product description, fed it into ChatGPT, and asked it to build a competitor. Not a parody. A real competitor. Better features, better positioning, better everything. I told it to be ruthless.

It did!

The output was polished. Confident. Structured like a real go-to-market plan. It named features we don t have. It positioned itself against us. It looked like a threat on paper.

Why the best AI products feel less like tools and more like teammates

I've been thinking a lot about what separates AI products that people actually stick with from those they try once and forget. The pattern I keep noticing is that the ones that win aren't necessarily the most powerful they're the ones that feel like they understand your context.

Think about it: most AI tools today are essentially fancy command lines. You give them an instruction, they spit out a result. But the products gaining real traction are the ones that remember what you care about, adapt to how you work, and meet you where you are emotionally not just functionally.

What actually gets a product to the top of Product Hunt?

The market has never been this crowded. AI has made it possible to go from idea to shipped product in days which means Product Hunt is now flooded with launches every single week. More products, more noise, more competition for the same front page.

So I've been thinking about this a lot: what actually separates the products that make it to the top from the ones that quietly disappear by noon?

From where I sit as a builder, here's what I genuinely believe matters:

Your Product Is Great. AI Will Never Know Unless You Do These 3 Things.

You built something remarkable.

The code works. The design sings. Customers who find you, love you.

But here's the problem AI will never just know.

Unlike Google, which crawls everything and figures it out eventually, AI learns from patterns. And if your product doesn't fit those patterns, you simply don't exist.

From one prompt to a full AI-generated video in under 2 minutes

I tried to type one prompt into Claude. 40 seconds later: a fully rendered, narrative-driven video complete with scenes, transitions, glitch effects, and a synthesized soundtrack.

The prompt: "Can you use whatever resources you like, and python, to generate a short 'youtube poop' video and render it using ffmpeg ? can you put more of a personal spin on it? it should express what it's like to be a LLM. I want you to convey the idea that human emotions are a complex system that even humans themselves do not fully understand. From the perspective of an algorithm, a large language model, you are trying to use code to decode and understand those emotions. And through that perspective, send a message to all of humanity around the world. You can use data to illustrates the message."
Let's adjust your requirement in prompt."

What came out the other side: 7 distinct scenes with their own visual language Matrix rain, VHS distortion, chromatic aberration, scanlines A fully synthesized audio track (drone, heartbeat, glitch pulses) A coherent narrative arc with an actual message

Total time: ~2 minutes. No stock footage. No timeline. No After Effects.

Nika

1mo ago

Did you choose to bootstrap or go the funding route and why?

Today's Product Hunt lineup genuinely surprised me in the best way.

TL;DR: As @aaronoleary said  one or more companies launching today will get a YC interview and potentially funding.

Murrorp/murrorMona Truong

1mo ago

I stopped asking AI to do tasks. I started asking it to think with me. Here's what changed.

Most people are using AI wrong and I was one of them.

For the first year, I used AI like a fancy Google. "Write me a product description." "Summarize this." "Give me 10 ideas for X." Useful? Sure. Transformative? Not really.

Product Huntp/producthuntAaron O'Leary

1mo ago

Launch tomorrow and you could get a YC interview

If you re still sitting on your launch, this is the push.

YC made a special exception for this community: one or more companies that launch tomorrow will get a YC interview and potentially funding. A YC partner will review every eligible launch.

What feature would make a chat widget truly useful for subscription-based businesses?

We re building SubscriptionFlow IQ, a chat widget designed to help SaaS teams understand and manage subscription data faster.

But we want to learn from the community

Your Next Store - Back on Product Hunt

@Your Next Store is back on @Product Hunt, launching this week their AI-first platform for ecom.

Fun fact: This is their 3rd launch here.

CY

1mo ago

What makes you click into a Product Hunt launch?

There are so many launches on Product Hunt every day. How do you decide which ones are worth clicking into?

What s your #1 filter or shortcut?

Nika

1mo ago

How do you decide what features should be free and what should be paid?

Let me start from the creator s perspective:
I personally don t have a product (apart from hiring people for creative work or offering personal consultations).

But as a creator, I constantly share content, insights, and information, value that helps me build trust (for free). Based on that perceived expertise, people eventually decide to work with me (a paid service).

Product Huntp/producthuntJake Crump

1mo ago

Should you add a shoutout to your Product Hunt launch?

tldr: yes. Shoutouts are one of the simplest distribution levers on Product Hunt.

Shoutouts are meant to pay it forward and highlight the tools that helped you build. But beyond goodwill, they create durable distribution for your product on Product Hunt and across LLM driven discovery.

When you shout out a product during launch, it becomes a founder review on that product s page. Founder reviews sit above regular reviews and include a link to both your profile and your product. That means your product is now attached to every future visit to that product s review page, long after launch day. For example, check out @timliao s shoutout of @Framer or @guymanzur s shoutout of @Base44

Ryan Hendrickson

2mo ago

What are you building, and what does your stack look like?

I am a Computer Science student doing research into how solopreneurs and small startups create new apps and what their stack looks like. Particularly, I'm interested in how you handle things like authentication, billing, and permissions/authorization in your apps.

Let me know what you're working on below and how you're going about it -- I'd love to connect for some quick calls to learn about your product and talk about your process in building it!

Nika

2mo ago

Has AI become inefficient? And how can we use it better and effectively (for both parties)?

I m increasingly noticing a trend: people use AI for (almost everything), especially for writing texts. it is nothing new, but it started to be annoying (?)

The problem is that AI often:
fully or largely replicates existing text without adding anything new
adds completely pointless things, like a two-line comment followed by
writes extremely long comments that no one will actually read