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Hey everyone — maker here 👋 We built Minara with a strong focus on design clarity and cognitive calm. In financial tools especially, it’s easy to add complexity to look powerful, but much harder to make things feel simple and trustworthy. Most of our design decisions came down to what we chose not to add. Really excited to hear how this approach resonates with you.

MinaraResearch, plan, and invest in one chat
Minara helps you move from market insight to investment action with confidence, in one chat.
Start with a question or a hunch. Minara gathers real-time context and does the heavy lifting to separate the wheat from the chaff, so you can decide your next play. When you’re ready, invest directly by executing on-chain trades in chat.
As you develop your investment chops, build powerful workflows to automate monitoring, reports, and rule-based strategies, so you can act quickly and decisively.

MinaraResearch, plan, and invest in one chat
Rexleft a comment
What stood out to me about Blink.new is how much it seems to value speed of intent rather than speed of execution. A lot of tools optimize for doing things faster once you’re already set up. Blink.new feels more focused on reducing the moment of hesitation at the start — getting from “I have an idea” to “I’m doing something” with as little friction as possible. From a UX perspective, that’s a...
Blink Agent BuilderYou can now vibe code agentic AI apps
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Just dictated my entire weekly status report during my morning commute. My manager was impressed by how detailed and well-organized it was.

Typeless for AndroidFirst AI voice keyboard for Android
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What stood out to me about One Dot is how much intention there seems to be behind keeping the concept simple. Products with minimal interfaces often risk feeling vague, but One Dot doesn’t come across that way. Instead, the simplicity feels deliberate — like the product is asking users to focus on one clear action or idea at a time. From a UX perspective, that kind of constraint can be...

One DotVisualize your life in dots with a daily-updating wallpaper
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What stood out to me about Vellum is how intentionally it frames complexity instead of trying to hide or over-simplify it. In tools that deal with structured thinking or layered workflows, it’s common to either overwhelm users or abstract things too much. Vellum feels like it’s aiming for a middle ground — making the structure visible, but not intimidating. From a UX perspective, that balance...

VellumBuild AI agents using plain English to do your boring tasks
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When information starts to pile up, what I appreciate about remio is that it doesn’t try to be louder or more complex. A lot of knowledge tools respond to overload by adding more structure, more automation, more “smart” features. remio feels like it’s making a quieter choice — helping information stay usable instead of just better organized. From a user perspective, that difference really...

remio 2.0Captures your work to build a searchable knowledge base
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What stood out to me about Session Pilot is how it treats sessions as something to stay present in, not just something to document afterward. A lot of tools around sessions, meetings, or work blocks focus on summaries and outputs. Session Pilot feels more intentional about supporting awareness during the session — helping users stay oriented without pulling attention away. From a UX...

Session PilotOffline Transcription
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What stood out to me about Dawiso is how grounded the experience feels. Instead of trying to impress with complexity or surface-level polish, the product seems focused on helping users stay oriented — clear structure, calm pacing, and interactions that don’t demand constant attention. From a UX perspective, that kind of restraint usually comes from understanding where users actually get stuck....

Dawiso AI Context LayerConnect AI agents to governed metadata via MCP
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What stood out to me about Hivinq is that it feels more like a shared space than a traditional tool. A lot of products in this category focus on workflows or outputs first. Hivinq seems to put more thought into how people actually gather, explore, and make sense of things together. From a UX perspective, that shift toward collective context — rather than individual actions — makes the...

HivinqCopilot for customer support in Slack
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What stood out to me about Alpine is how much it seems to value structure without making things feel rigid. A lot of products in this space either overwhelm users with flexibility or lock them into predefined flows. Alpine feels more balanced than that — the interface suggests clear paths while still leaving room to adapt, which from a UX perspective usually reduces friction rather than adding...

AlpineAll your work in one place: docs, tasks, chat, AI and more
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What stood out to me about KNOA is how much it seems to prioritize clarity over cleverness. In products that deal with knowledge or understanding, it’s easy to overcomplicate the interface in an attempt to look powerful. KNOA feels more intentional than that — the experience appears designed to help users stay oriented and confident, rather than constantly reminding them how much is happening...

KNOAThe AI that captures your team's knowledge
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Scrolling through, Elser AI felt surprisingly calm. A lot of AI tools come off as rushed or overly confident, but this one doesn’t. The interface gives you a bit of breathing room, which makes it easier to actually think instead of just reacting. That restraint really stood out to me on first glance. Feels thoughtful without trying too hard — which is rare around here.
Elser AICreate full anime shorts with just a prompt in minutes
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Quick question about Its Hover — the product seems to treat hover not as a visual flourish, but as a core design language. From a design perspective, what led you to center the experience around hover interactions instead of more explicit UI or copy? Was there a moment where this approach clearly resonated with users? Asking because that choice feels both playful and deliberate in the first...
Its HoverIcons that move and react mirroring user intent
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Quick question about Still — the product feels intentionally quiet in a space that usually rewards constant signals and visible activity. From a design perspective, what led you to prioritize calm and presence over more traditional productivity cues? Was there a particular user insight or experience that shaped that decision? Asking because that restraint comes through clearly in the first...

StillA private space to think, write, and slow down
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Quick question about Dessix — the visual hierarchy feels very intentional, especially in how attention is guided without heavy UI or effects. From a design standpoint, what trade-offs did you have to make to keep the interface this focused while still supporting more complex use cases? Asking because that restraint really comes through in the first impression.

DessixVisual workspace to capture, organize, and create with AI
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Quick question about Agihalo — the product feels unusually calm and composed for something built around complex AI workflows. Instead of signaling intelligence through dense UI or constant feedback, Agihalo seems to prioritize orientation and trust. From a design perspective, what user behaviors or early observations led you to lean into this more restrained, confidence-building approach?...

AgihaloLLM Router for A.I Agent & Saas with x402
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What stands out about okara is how deliberate it feels about removing friction instead of adding structure. Many products in this space lean toward more controls and visible feedback to signal value. Okara seems to take the opposite approach — prioritizing flow and clarity, especially for the first interaction. That restraint usually reflects a strong understanding of real user behavior. As a...

Okara Reddit AgentAn agent that monitors, curates & writes authentic comments
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From a design perspective, Ray feels intentionally understated. Instead of trying to explain everything up front, the interface seems to trust progressive disclosure — letting clarity emerge through interaction rather than through dense UI or copy. That choice usually signals a team that’s thought carefully about first-time user anxiety. As a first impression, the product feels calm and...

RayAn AI trainer that plans + adapts your workouts in real-time




