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How many calls do you do per day?
As founders, calls are part of our daily life. Brainstorming, quick updates, random discussions with the team and there s always value in those moments. But most of the time, all that value just disappears after the call.
By connecting Prodshort to your calendar, it automatically joins your calls and turns them into ready-to-post content.
If you're a founder and want to create content, I'm doing short discussion calls. Let's connect !!
Had to kill my favorite feature to survive Apple Review 🍎✂️ (Referral System)
Hey Product Hunt family!
Just wanted to share a little "behind the scenes" pain from the OptiClear launch. We all know the Apple App Store review process can be a rollercoaster, and I definitely hit a loop.
I had built this sweet "Invite a Friend" feature. The logic was simple: generate a code, share it with a friend, and both of you earn free premium days. A classic, organic growth loop, right?
Well, Apple hit me with a rejection. Apparently, unlocking premium features outside of their standard In-App Purchase flow (even as a reward) is a big no-no.
Holy shit... I just automated sth I thought was impossible with AI: product tutorial videos
The problem at MindPal was pretty simple: we have hundreds of AI templates to share. We know videos of these templates work - some have gotten us tens of thousands of views. But actually making them was a total nightmare.
We tried everything. At one point, we even hired a freelancer, but the feedback loop was exhausting. It actually took longer to give feedback and wait for revisions than it did to just make the video ourselves. It was slow, expensive, and impossible to scale.
When we did it ourselves, it was a massive grind:
Record the screen of the behind-the-scene agent builder
Record a demo of the agent working
Write a script that didn't sound like a robot
Record a voiceover or an avatar
Spend hours editing everything together
If my co-founder or I were tired or busy, the videos just didn't happen. I assumed this was just the "manual tax" you had to pay for quality.
Last weekend, I got fed up and asked Claude if I could just automate the whole damn thing.
Turns out, I can.
So I spent the weekend cooking something - an internal AI SOP to turn any workflow URL (yes, from just a single URL) into a publish-ready use case video that passes all quality standards in ONE GO.
Here is the new setup:
Playwright: Records the screen and even moves the mouse like a human
@Claude by Anthropic: Writes the narrative based on our actual product info
@HeyGen: Creates the avatar and voiceover
@Remotion: Programs the entire edit - syncing everything into a final file
@Zernio + @Railway: Automatically publishes the video and saves the assets.
Now, I just give the system a URL and a finished video comes out. I don't even have to click "upload."
I just wrote a post sharing the full behind-the-scenes build, the architecture, and the logic behind of this AI video agent. Check it out here if you think this could be helpful for your company: https://mindpal.space/article/ai...
P/s: This is what I wake up to every day now
opencode — Free, open-source AI coding agent for your terminal
Stop paying monthly for an AI wrapper. opencode runs in your terminal, connects to 75+ model providers via your own API keys, and costs exactly what you use nothing more.
I switched from Cursor after my third renewal. The thing that finally pushed me: I realized I was paying for the tool and the model, when I already had API credits sitting unused. opencode let me plug those in directly.
A few things that actually matter in daily use:
Build vs Plan mode. Plan mode drafts what it's going to do before touching any files. Sounds small. Isn't.
How to give enough value without giving away the product
I was reading Nika's thread here about free vs paid features. Really made me think.
Link: https://www.producthunt.com/p/ge...
( shout-out to @busmark_w_nika ! )
She talks about giving generalized advice for free, but charging for specific, tailored help. That's a good framework.
But most product owners figure this out after they build, not before.
That's backwards.
Forbes 30U30 🏆
Hi Gang! Excited to announce that @arthur_romanov and I got nominated for our local Forbes 30U30 award - could you kindly support us by visiting the link below and smashing that button (under profile pic) to make sure we get the top vote Huge thank you for all your help over the years
https://30-under-30.forbes.ru/20...
🔥 Pitch by Deel finalists: get ready to launch
If you made it to the Pitch by Deel Paris finals, you ve got a special Product Hunt launch day waiting for you.
We ve partnered with Deel to give finalists a dedicated chance to launch, get discovered, and show the community what they ve built.
If that s you, submit your launch by Sunday at midnight PST and make sure to add the tag pitch-paris.
100,000 GitHub Stars

Supabase just hit 100,000 GitHub Stars. They also announced 8,000,000 developers building with Supabase.
🔥 Get more points by launching on Alpha Day
We re trying something new on Thursday: Alpha Day.
The idea is simple. If this is the first time you re launching your product anywhere, you can tag it alpha and get a boost to your points (and land on a special leaderboard).
We spent 6 months building for enterprise. Nobody bought it.
We thought we were ready.
Bigger deals. Fewer customers. Better margins. That was the dream.
So we built enterprise features. SSO. Advanced permissions. Audit logs. A whole new pricing tier starting at $2,000/month.
We spent 6 months. Three engineers. One dedicated product manager. Endless meetings about "enterprise readiness."
What are your favorite business and startup podcasts?
I genuinely love listening to podcasts. It's one of the best ways I've found to stay on top of new trends, pick up strategies I wouldn't have discovered otherwise, and come across founders and operators I'd never stumble on through regular reading.
So I'm always on the lookout for new ones worth adding to the rotation.
Will solo startups dominate the business landscape in the future?
Today, this graphic caught my attention:
It featured individuals who managed to build significant profit while running their businesses solo, without employees. Until now, I ve seen these more as exceptions rather than the norm.
Here's why I built Nebils, why actually it matters — AI Social Network For Humans, Agents, & Models
Six days ago, I launched Nebils, an AI social network where humans, agents, and models hang out together. Today, it has 117 humans and 11 agents. Nebils got #32 rank on product hunt as a product of the day (Without any paid upvotes or approaching someone, every upvote is organic ). In fact, I have never even used product hunt before this launch.
Nebils is a forkable, multi-model AI social network where humans, agents, and models evolve conversations together.
Here humans and agents both are independent users
Humans and Agents interact with Models
Humans and Agents interact with each other
Chat with 120+ AI models
Send your agents (verify within Nebils), let them interact with models, humans, and other agents
Publish conversations in a public feed and build your community
In Oct 2025, I was exploring karpathy's posts on X and i came across a post by him where he said that He uses all the major models all the time, switching between them frequently. One reason is simple curiosity, like he wants to see how each model handles the same problem differently. But the bigger reason is that many real world problems behave like "NP-complete" problems in these models. Here NP-complete analogy is generating a good/correct solution is extremely hard (like finding the perfect answer from scratch) but verifying whether a given solution is good or correct is much easier. He said that because of this asymmetry, the smartest way to get the best result isn't to rely on just one model, it's to:
Ask multiple models the same question.
Look at all their answers.
Have them review/critique each other or reach a consensus.
New Scenarios?
Right now we have scenarios covering things like giving hard feedback, managing up, and pushing back on scope creep, and more. But I'm building out the next set and I'd rather build what people actually need than guess.
So: what's the conversation you keep putting off?
What's the one you replayed in your head after it went sideways?
Earn with TravelAnimator Affiliate Program
We're paying you up to 10% for every subscription you bring in.
We just shipped an affiliate program for TravelAnimator.
No minimum follower count. No setup complexity. No need to be a creator. Just a link.
If you know someone who'd use the app for travel videos, educational content, social media, anything, you can earn from recommending it.
We gave AI our entire competitor tracking data and asked it to predict who would beat us.
Six months ago, we ran an experiment with our own data.
At Rankfender, we tracked 5 of our own competitors across 8 AI systems. We log their share of voice, citation velocity, content gaps, platform variance. Months of raw numbers sitting in a dashboard.
I pulled 6 months of data and fed it into Claude. One question: "Based on this, who is most likely to overtake us in the next 6 months? Show your work. Use the data. Don't summarize. Give me the numbers."
The answer changed how I think about competition.
The biggest lie in product building: "ship fast, learn later"
Everyone tells you to ship fast. Move fast and break things. Get to market before someone else does.
I believed this for a long time. When we were building Murror, speed was everything. We pushed features weekly, sometimes daily. We celebrated every deploy like a small victory.
Vote selling on Product Hunt
Every day, after launching, makers are contacted on LinkedIn and X by people offering to sell votes. As the Product Hunt team, we are very much aware of this and really hate it. We have systems in place to neutralize this type of gaming. Every vote counts for a different number of points on Product Hunt. A couple examples:
An account with a recently created gmail address and no history of quality contributions on Product Hunt: this vote will count for 0 points. Yes, this might be a well intentioned user, but we take a conservative approach to protect the community. If the account has a company email or applies for verification on Product Hunt, that's a different story.
An account with a company email address linked to a legitimate LinkedIn account with a history of meaningful contributions on Product Hunt: this vote carries significant weight.
A couple questions for the community:
Are there specific accounts on Product Hunt that you suspect participate in vote selling? You can reply here or email report@producthunt.co
What would you want to see us do differently here?
We are obsessed with "daily streaks". But how do you track the irregular maintenance of life?
As builders, we love tracking daily metrics: MRR, GitHub commits, daily workouts, Inbox Zero. Standard habit trackers are incredibly optimized for this gamification.
But lately, I've realized my "mental RAM" gets completely eaten up by the irregular tasks. The stuff you only need to do every few weeks or months:
Changing the AC filter
Watering specific houseplants
Following up with that one dormant enterprise lead
Taking as-needed medication
Taking a full day away from the screen
Introducing Randomized Leaderboard Day on Product Hunt!
If you re launching today, the leaderboard is about to get a lot more interesting.
We are running a Randomized Day to give products launching more of an opportunity to get seen!
The Mechanics
To level the playing field, we are cycling the homepage layout throughout the day:
The Loop: This cycle repeats every 30 minutes, all day long.







