April 13th, 2025
OpenAI's biggest move yet?
This newsletter was brought to you byAssemblyAIhappy sunday š«¶
gm friends and welcome back to yet another Sunday! It's time to brew a fresh cup and dive into this week's Roundup. In today's issue: a talk to publish app, a more human LinkedIn, a spotlight for your apps, a dive into OpenAI's next big move, and more.
P.S. Want your launch to be featured in this newsletter? Drop us a line with your pitch at editorial@producthunt.co š«¶
You prompt your LLMs, why not your speech-to-text?

AssemblyAIās Universal-3 Pro introduces a new class of promptable speech modelsābuilt for real-world Voice AI. It handles domain-specific language, multiple languages, accents, and noisy audio with ease.
Unlike traditional ASR, Universal-3 Pro lets developers guide accuracy with prompts, combining the reliability of speech recognition with the controllability of LLMsāso youāre not stuck fixing transcripts after the fact.
AssemblyAI is opening free access throughout February, and the Product Hunt community is among the first to try what promptable ASR can do.
š Try Universal-3 Pro for free
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OpenAI is open again?

OpenAIās latest move isnāt a shiny new model or viral image dropāitās a Google Form. But it might be one of the more interesting things theyāve done this year.
Theyāre working on a new language model with open weights and, for the first time in a while, asking the public what they want from it. The last time OpenAI released anything truly open was GPT-2 back in 2019. Since then, the ecosystem has shifted. Metaās LLaMA models are everywhere, Mistralās picking up steam, and open-source AI has gone from niche to normal. Now OpenAI is stepping back in and asking, āWhat should we build together?ā
The questions theyāre asking arenāt small. How should the model be licensed? Who should get to use it? What should the boundaries be? It feels less like a product launch and more like a pulse check. A way to show theyāre listening, even after a few years of keeping things mostly locked down.
Thereās still a lot we donāt know. What the model will be, how open āopenā really means, or when itās actually coming. But the shift in tone is clear. Less āhereās what we made,ā more āhelp us make the right thing.ā
Have an original thought, maybe?

NikaĀ asked whichĀ online product categories are officially doing too muchāand the replies didnāt hold back.
AI writing tools. Habit trackers. Social apps with no people. Everyone agrees some corners of the internet are just clones stacked on clones.
Still, a few called out overlooked spacesālike tools for kids, or actually useful learning platforms. Maybe the problem isnāt saturation. Maybe itās originality.
Got your own pick?
Every Sunday
Everything you missed this past week on Product Hunt: Top products, spicy community discourse, key trends on the site, and long-form pieces weāve recently published.
