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$1,033 USD in 24 hours from our AppSumo launch.

We launched Slashit App yesterday on appsumo and completed the first 24 hours since launch.

Here s what happened:
-> $1,033.56 in sales
-> 18 new customers
-> Featured in Top 9 deals
-> 2 reviews with 5

What we did mostly last 24 hours? If I will share this, you will not trust us, yes you will not trust us. We slept 2 hours each. That mean I slept 2 hours and my partner slept 2 hours in this last 24 hours. Still working hard for next 24 hours.

We replied all the questions, support message within minutes. Asked brutal feedback for improvements for our users. Shared possible solution to users that they are facing.

Landon Reid

1d ago

We help you know what you can build on any property in 20 seconds (not 2 months)

Hey PH! I'm Landon, founder of ReadyPermit.ai.

We help real estate investors, developers, and homeowners know what they can build on any property in 20 seconds. What consultants charge $3,500+ for and take months -- we deliver instantly.

Hey Product Hunt.! I’m Mohamed, founder of Sharkforce

I m Mohamed, an AI engineer and the founder of @Sharkforce, the AI trust layer for the modern workforce.

I ve spent the last few years building AI systems for real-world operations from computer vision to workflow automation and one thing became obvious:

Companies don t actually know if work is truly happening.

10+ Years of Backend Experience Taught Me How (Not) to Use AI

I want to talk about how I built @MCPCore - a cloud platform where developers create, deploy, and manage MCP servers from their browser - and what 10+ years of backend experience taught me about using AI in production work. Not the hype version. The honest one.

Every idea is already taken. So what?

I'm a backend engineer. I've spent most of my career building server-side systems, and I currently lead a backend team at my company. At some point I wanted to build something of my own. A product. Something real.

Spoke to hundreds of businesses in last 4 years, here's what I learned

Over the last 4 years I have spoken to hundreds of companies.

Here is what I learned:

We're launching RCGE v2.2 soon. Help us not build something you'll hate.

We're enhancing Rankfender's Content Generation Engine (RCGE) and v2.2 is coming in the next few weeks. Before we lock things in, we want to know what actually matters to people who use content generation tools.

Here's what RCGE already does:

  • Intelligence. It analyzes the top 10 ranking articles for any keyword and identifies patterns. What structure do they use? What headers? What formatting? What makes them get cited by AI? Then it builds a brief based on what actually works, not guesswork.

  • Structure control. You can add, remove, and reorganize H2s before generation. No fixed templates. You decide the flow.

  • Inline images. Generated articles include images, not just text walls.

  • Regeneration. Mess up one paragraph? Regenerate just that part. Not the whole article.

What we're adding in v2.2:

Your first 50 users will teach you more than your last 5,000 lines of code

When we started building Murror, we did what most technical founders do: we disappeared into code for months.

We built an emotion analysis engine. We refined our NLP pipeline. We designed beautiful dashboards. We were so proud of what we had made.

X Launch vs LinkedIn

We went live on X, hit 200k+ views: https://x.com/gauravsbuilding/st...
But I have a feeling we can do better on LinkedIn, what's your experience?https://www.linkedin.com/posts/g...?

Murrorp/murrorMona Truong

10d ago

The one marketing lesson I learned from building an AI product that no one talks about

When we started building Murror, I made the same mistake most AI founders make: I marketed the technology.

"Powered by AI." "Smart algorithms." "Personalized insights." All the buzzwords. And you know what happened? Crickets.