They say the best investment is in your health. (I agree, although I have to admit I don t really stick to that myself.)
Right now, health is mostly being supported at the level of:
physical fitness (workout apps, weight-loss tools, smart devices for heart-rate tracking, step counters) mental health (e.g., digital detox apps, a personal therapist in your phone) longevity (more of a long-term process, experimenting across different areas)
It s been a week since we launched Ovren - and I just want to say a genuine thank you.
We built Ovren because every team has backlog work that never makes it into a sprint. Not more ideas. Not more AI suggestions. Real engineering work that needs to get shipped.
So we launched Ovren as an AI engineering execution product for real backlog tasks: AI frontend and backend engineers that work inside your real codebase, execute scoped work, and return reviewable code updates.
Most software wants you to come back every day. The business model depends on it. More sessions, more engagement, more opportunities to monetize.
But what happens when your product's purpose is to help someone understand themselves better? At Murror, we've been wrestling with a paradox: if we do our job well, users should eventually need us less not more.
I'm Mark, solo dev and co-founder of Moss Piglet a privacy-first public benefit company.
Habit tracking is personal. Your goals, your struggles, your progress that's some of the most intimate data you can generate about yourself. So why does every habit tracker out there store it in plaintext on their servers?
Metamorphic is a zero-knowledge encrypted habit tracker. Your data is encrypted in your browser before it ever leaves your device. The server never sees your habits, your goals, or your progress. Not even we can read it.
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: