hyelang

hyelang

Always in beta, never standing still

About

I’m driven by curiosity and the desire to keep improving. I believe every product, idea, and skill is a work in progress, and that’s what keeps innovation alive. Constantly learning, building, and evolving because progress never stops

Badges

Gemologist
Gemologist
Tastemaker
Tastemaker
Gone streaking
Gone streaking

Forums

The next stage of coding agents

Coding agents have transformed software development. It's now possible to do in a day what used to take weeks. Features that would have gathered dust in a forgotten Jira ticket now see the light of day! This wave will keep going, making developers more and more productive.

There are still bottlenecks in the product development, but they've shifted. Writing code is no longer the constraint. Taste and judgement are, and in software, there's no place where taste and judgement are more obvious than in the UI. Crafting thoughtful, distinctive, high quality user experiences is still a constraint. No one wants their product to be perceived as a generic slop cannon.

Product Huntp/producthuntMike Kerzhner

22d ago

Would you read a topic digest newsletter?

Hello Product Hunt! We are thinking of spinning up topic specific, weekly digest newsletters that break up the firehose of goodness that is the Product Hunt leaderboard. What topics would you subscribe to? Who would you like to see sponsor these newsletters?

Here is an early prototype of what an AI Agent Digest newsletter might look like: https://gist.github.com/kerzhner...

Murrorp/murrorMona Truong

22d ago

The retention trick nobody talks about: making your product feel like it remembers you

There is a moment that separates products people use once from products people come back to every day. It is not a feature. It is not a notification. It is the feeling that the product remembers who you are.

I have been thinking about this a lot while building Murror. We spent so much time on acquisition, onboarding funnels, and activation metrics. But the thing that actually moved our retention numbers was something much simpler: continuity.

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