Writing on the @1Password blog, Jason Meller says that he found that the top downloaded OpenClaw skill was a malware delivery vehicle:
While browsing ClawHub (I won t link it for obvious reasons), I noticed the top downloaded skill at the time was a Twitter skill. It looked normal: description, intended use, an overview, the kind of thing you d expect to install without a second thought.
But the very first thing it did was introduce a required dependency named openclaw-core, along with platform-specific install steps. Those steps included convenient links ( here , this link ) that appeared to be normal documentation pointers.
I m curious. Do you usually work with music on? Do you have go-to songs or playlists that help boost your energy and creativity while working?
Personally, I like starting my mornings with chill instrumental piano music to ease into the day. Later on, I switch to R&B, pop, or something more upbeat to keep the momentum going. Recently, I ve been vibing with:
Love - Keyshia Cole
So Easy (To Fall in Love), Man I Need - Olivia Dean
Running Up That Hill - Kate Bush
End of Beginning - Djo
Moonwalkin - LNGSHOT
Damn right - JENNIE, Childish Gambino, Kali Uchis
Keshi s playlists in general
What playlists or songs have you been listening to lately while working? Really curious to discover what everyone else is into
I've been trying it out and am highly impressed, and becoming aware of just how tonkotsu is built around a deeply simple concept. Your document is your foundation, and you build from there. It should read like a notebook that also has every feature and its tasks attached. It's like if Jupyter or Colab were used for project management. Tonkotsu is perfect for people who work in blocks or steps, for those who break down a problem into small er ones and keep their focus on the goal. Chart course on paper, engrave your goals in stone. How do you use tonkotsu?
Do you consider yourself to be this sort of person?
I joined Product Hunt about 2 months ago, and ever since receiving my first compliments and comments on our recent product launch, I ve truly felt how nice and supportive people here are. Everyone seems open to discussion, willing to help, and genuinely curious about what others are building.
At first, I thought it would be really hard for a newcomer like me to join such a big community. But it turned out to be much less strict than I expected - actually, it feels like a place with so much potential for us to grow together.
Every day on Product Hunt, I feel like I m learning or discovering something new. It s not just about upvotes. It s about ideas, feedback, and seeing how others think and build.
hash is a fast, lightweight Unix shell written from scratch in C with a focus on POSIX compliance and cross-platform portability.
Whether you're on Linux, macOS, or FreeBSD, x86_64 or ARM64, hash runs natively with zero dependencies. It's designed for developers who appreciate the simplicity of POSIX semantics but want a shell built with modern tooling and release practices.
I came to exactly the same conclusion that real startup ideas often come from simple and boring problems. From my own experience: I spent three years on a startup that was supposed to revolutionize online education, but in the end it had 0 users. Now I ve just started solving a simple problem for home appliance repair technicians and immediately got my first paying users on a very rough MVP.
Today marks my 1 0 0 0 day streak in on product hunt - wow does time fly
The last 2.7 years have been insane From discovering awesome products (built by SF legends) to actually launching 2 products myself and winning 2x product of the month awards a golden kitty with @Clustr and now being nominated for an orbit award with @Trace feels unreal. Not only did my team go through the ups and downs, but we persevered and survived two top tier accelerators with @500 Startups & @Y Combinator - gotta catch them all