happy sunday 🫶
gm legends and welcome back to the Roundup! In today's issue: Google's new prompt to UI tool, Claude's biggest update yet, a plain-language app builder, Jony Ive's newest product, and a discussion on how to audit your vibecoded apps.
So we’re just… talking to software now?

ElevenLabs has been the go-to for voice for a while. Now they've turned that expertise into agents that actually get things done. You set one up, it talks like a real person, listens, responds, and helps handle the task — support calls, bookings, whatever the job is. Not a demo, not a "press 1 for sales" situation. It's ready to deploy. Feels like one of those shifts where the interface quietly changes. Less typing, less clicking, more just saying what needs to happen and letting it play out.
Leaderboard highlights






Jony's next big thing

In case you've been living under a rock the past week: Jony Ive, the guy who designed the iPhone, iPod, and more has decided to team up with OpenAI to crack the AI hardware nut.
What's the big move? An AI-powered vape, according to the internet. How much more Silicon Valley could you possibly get?
Wait, who is auditing the bots!?

Constantine dropped a worry bomb: “If you vibecode your product, part-time AI, part-time human, how do you keep it secure?”
Replies grouped up fast. Some folks lean on automated scanners and CI checks to catch the low-hanging bugs before code ever merges. Others call in pen-test pros once a quarter, treating AI-generated chunks with extra suspicion. A third camp swears by threat-modeling sessions and good old manual reviews, arguing that you still need eyeballs on every line, bot-written or not.
Big takeaway: AI can write code, but it can’t sign off on security. Worth a scroll if your repo already has more machine commits than human ones.
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 we’ve recently published.
