April 10th, 2025
Review faster, ship faster
This newsletter was brought to you byVantano more dinner fights đ
gm friends and welcome back to yet another edition of the Leaderboard. In today's issue, we've got: a tool to visualize those pesky pull requests, Airtable's new Ai assistant, and an app that helps couple's decide on dinner plans.
Visualize your pull requests

Haystack Code Reviewer turns code reviews into an infinite canvas you can explore. Instead of scrolling through dense diffs, it breaks changes into a visual map so you can trace logic, spot issues, and give feedback faster.
đĽ Our take: Code reviews shouldnât feel like flipping through legal documents. Haystack gives them flow. Itâs part mind map, part version control time machine. If your teamâs been eyeballing 500-line diffs and pretending they make sense, this might finally save your sanity.
Build with prompts, not panels

Airtableâs AI Assistant helps you create tables, write formulas, and spin up apps by describing what you need. It works across your base so you can skip the menus and get straight to building.
đĽ Our take: Most people treat Airtable like a smarter spreadsheet. This is the first time it feels like a teammate. You donât have to remember which column does what or how to set up a filter. Just ask, and it handles the logic.

Your software needs to be compliant to win deals. But you also need your engineers focused on building your product â NOT pulling SOC 2 evidence.
Enter a third option: make Vanta your first security hire.
Vanta uses AI and automation to get you compliant fast, simplify your audit process, and unblock deals â so you can prove to customers that you take security seriously.
Plus, Vanta scales right along with you, backed by support that's there when you need it, every step of the way.
That's why top startups like Cursor, Linear, and Replit use Vanta to get â and stayâ secure.
Donât SOC-block your best engineer. Set them free and get compliant fast with Vanta.
Stop arguing about dinner

Duocook is a shared meal planner for two. You take a quiz, swap food preferences, and get recipe suggestions that work for both of you. Import recipes, sync plans, and cut the âwhat do you want to eatâ loop before it starts.
đĽ Our take: Every couple has their version of the âI donât know, what do you want?â standoff. Duocook doesnât eliminate it. It just gives you something better to point at than the fridge.
Are âstupid appsâ secretly the future?

Thatâs what Gabe is betting on. In this thread, he makes the case for âvibewareââapps that arenât trying to solve big problems, they just make you smile. Stuff like Klack, Googly Eyes, TabTab. No roadmap, no AI agent, just vibes.
He ties it all to the rise of vibecodingâusing tools like Cursor and Replit to ship tiny, weird ideas fast, without pretending theyâre the next unicorn. More fun, fewer pitch decks.
If you miss the old internetâor just want to build weird stuff without a strategy docâthis threadâs for you..
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Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterdayâs top ten launches. Thatâs it.









