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The Roundup

October 19th, 2025

Apple quietly improves its hardware for AI

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Power to the processors

gm legends. It’s Sunday Funday.

In this edition, we talk about the new iPad Pro, look at how much momentum you actually have post-launch, explain how getting fired could be your big break, reintroduce you to a Product Hunt launch of yore, and share the most popular new products this week.

Ready? Let’s do this. 

P.S. Launching soon? We’d love to hear about it → editorial@producthunt.co 🫶

IN THE NEWS

Time for a new iPad?

On Wednesday, Apple announced three new products that look very much like three existing products: the iPad Pro, MacBook Pro, and Vision Pro. The big difference is what’s inside: the company’s new M5 chip.

There’s lots of fancy hardware talk — ”third-generation 3-nanometer technology,” “next-generation 10-core GPU architecture” — but the upshot (according to Apple) is that, in addition to better graphics, the chip will drastically improve the computing power for AI applications. As in 350% better than the M4’s AI performance. So now, instead of just watching movies on a plane, your iPad Pro can become a serious productivity device. 

It’s a similar story for the MacBook Pro, which ups its graphics game 60% and adds more memory bandwidth. And if you’re into headsets, the Vision Pro takes a big jump from the M2 version — 25% more battery life, 50% faster AI features, and 20% better refresh rates.

We’re curious: Do you see the need to rush out and buy the improved hardware?

FROM THE FORUMS

Keeping momentum post-launch

If you’re curious to know how well your Product Hunt product hub page is converting, fmerian has been running the numbers. He was “positively surprised” to find those pages converting to product signups over 20% of the time. He also found that a new launch gave products about 30 days of momentum before signup and click volume dropped off.

Founder stories

How getting sacked got me building an app I didn’t know I needed

By Jamie Smith

I left the UK in August to go traveling with my partner. By the time I got back, I was single and unemployed. 

I wasn’t in a good place. To cope with the traveling blues and the breakup, I turned to bedrotting. I was lying there, scrolling Instagram and TikTok, jumping from news app to news app, opening dozens of loops but never closing any of them. I was looking for distraction and some sort of comfort, but I couldn’t get it on a screen. My phone habits were making me feel worse. 

So I set out to better manage my relationship with my device.

And…it didn’t work. The existing screentime apps like Opal, Brick, and Jomo are very all-or-nothing. There's no middle ground where I felt I could stay informed without getting sucked back in by social media algorithms.

I still wanted to go on YouTube to see what news channels were saying about international politics, but I didn’t want to get distracted by all the other recommendations that happened to be there. I still wanted to see what my friends were up to on Instagram, but I didn't want to be enticed by the reels asking me to watch just one more video. I still wanted to check my emails, but I didn’t want to lose half an hour to meaningless messages. Software’s stickiness made it nearly impossible for me to stay disciplined.

So I set out with a new mission: to make something for myself that would allow me to stay updated without becoming easily distracted.

What I envisioned was a hub that put things in an environment where I had control — letting me stay on my home turf instead of cruising through internet neighborhoods filled with booby traps. That way, I could avoid the endless stream of information, the notifications, and the slot machine-like UX.

I’ve started building that. Siftly is part wellness tool, part productivity tool. It’s completely customizable and designed to put people back in control of their digital experience. Ironically, my relationship to screens has improved since I started creating the app because I'm coming at it from a creator mindset instead of a consumer mindset. But if Siftly doesn’t work out, even if I go on the dole, I’ll be doing it without the scroll.

'POP QUIZ, HOTSHOT'

Guess the launch

Imagine browsing the web in olden times, a downpour of information hitting you with each new tab. To manage the deluge and keep track of what matters, you needed a solid bookmarks manager. So when this product rolled out version 5 on October 15, 2020, it hit #1 on Product Hunt for the week. Better yet, the one-man company is still rolling. 

Weekly

Leaderboard highlights

Emergent — Advanced AI app builder that ships full-stack appsEmergent is an agentic AI platform that takes your idea in plain English and builds full-stack web or mobile apps. It uses multiple agents to plan, code, test, and ship, the way a real engineering team would, without you having to juggle infrastructure or technical setup.
Strawberry
Strawberry — Browser with AI companions that automate web tasksStrawberry is a browser built to make your web time productive. It helps you research across hundreds of sites in seconds, automate repetitive tasks, turn meeting content into notes, and write in your own voice. all with agents that live inside the browser.
Mailmodo AI
Mailmodo AI — Complete email marketing with just promptsMailmodo AI turns your emails into something closer to an app. You can build interactive messages with forms, polls, and actions that actually work inside the inbox, no links, no landing pages, no bounce-outs. It also uses AI to write and segment campaigns so your sends feel smarter, not spammy.
UNDOOMED
UNDOOMED — Stop doomscrolling. A mute button for Reels, Shorts & feeds.Undoomed silences the worst parts of social platforms, Reels, Shorts, TikToks, while keeping messages, posts, and search intact. Flip a switch per app, track how much you scroll, and watch clarity rise. It’s available on iOS now, Android’s coming soon.
Outchat AI
Outchat AI — Launch and monetize your own branded AI chatOutchat lets creators build a chat version of themselves. You feed it your writing, host it on your site, and people can talk to your content instead of just reading it. You can even add branding or charge for access if you want to turn it into a business.
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The Roundup

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.