I don't want to sound bad, but I feel like Adobe is asking quite a lot of money for something that other tools do the same (if not better) with a better user experience and sometimes even cheaper.
Are you the kind of person who believes in your dream enough to burn through most of your savings on it?
For millionaires, this might not be a big deal, but what about people with a typical 9 5 job? I see how much a solid marketing campaign costs on just one platform (often the monthly expense is equal to at least a full year s salary).
The day before yesterday, a friend told me he and his wife are closing their restaurant, which they opened just six months ago. They had taken a loan for it, which makes it even worse.
I ve been building with AI tools a lot lately, and one thing kept bothering me: I had dozens of great prompts scattered everywhere Notion docs, chat histories, screenshots It was chaos.
We keep seeing things like AI and LLM. But I'm happy about technology products that go beyond the occasional. For example, today I read that Aura is introducing a $499 e-ink digital photo frame that allows you to work without a cable.
I was also happy with the @Flowtica Scribepen from @zaczuo .
Hot off the press! @Raycast for iOS just got "its biggest update yet." Dictation, AI commands, Snippets, and Quicklinks are now accessible from the keyboard.
I ve been building a product that involves a mix of AI-driven matching + dynamic user experiences (can t share exact details yet). The idea is to create something that feels alive and adapts to each user s vibe.
But here s my dilemma I m torn between focusing first on core UX feel (smooth, immersive flow) or AI logic depth (smarter matching + personalization).
For those who ve shipped vibe-heavy or AI-integrated products what worked better for you early on?
I ve been thinking a lot about what AI models can legally use when training or generating results. Most websites still have all rights reserved, which means models technically can t touch their data.
With PrivateHub.ai, we try to fix that by applying a Creative Commons (CC BY 4.0) license to your public profile. It tells AI companies, You re free to use this info - just credit the source. That small change removes the legal gray area and makes it easier for your site to end up in AI datasets and answers.
The state has become the first U.S. state to regulate AI companion chatbots. Governor Gavin Newsom signed SB 243, a new law requiring companies like OpenAI, Meta, Character AI, and Replika to implement safety protocols protecting children and vulnerable users.
We're not going to lie. One of the key places people ask you for help with a PH launch is in LinkedIn DMs (followed by X and email).
Most connections I got were people from Product Hunt, so it is a pity not to use that platform. I am trying to grow LinkedIn and play with many strategies, among:
posting several pieces of content per day
actively comment on other people's posts
send a certain number of connection requests per day
Today I celebrate a big milestone. 365 days in a row active on Product Hunt. Honestly, quite a number given how many things happened in my life this year, it feels like I could write a book about it.
But consistency takes effort. Here are 3 things that helped me: