January 4th, 2026
Whereâs tech headed in 2026?
This newsletter was brought to you byGetViktorWelcome to the future
gm legends. Itâs the first Sunday of the year.
Donât tell us your New Yearâs resolution is toast already? This week, one last look back at 2025âs best tools, some products you should resolve to put in your personal stack, how to be more productive in 2026, and why your code reviews might be stifling your junior engineers.Â
So, shake off that lingering hangover, dust off the keyboard, and enjoy the first weekly newsletter of 2026.
P.S. Launching soon? Weâd love to hear about it â editorial@producthunt.co đŤś
Build your tookit

Fmerian, who makes a habit of hunting dev tools, got a tad nostalgic and started cataloguing the best developer tools launched on Product Hunt in 2025. His list includes some of the usual suspects, including Cursor 2.0, v0 by Vercel, and Appwrite Sites.Â
Heâs got a dozen more. Are you using them?
Pro hacks

Nika kicked off a new thread for the new year, asking: What will be the productivity hack of 2026?
People are talking about ditching distractions, nixing the noise, and batching their business tasks. Scroll the comments and see what you can take awayâor add.
We asked 34 customers what Viktor does for them. Not one said chatbot.

They kept using words like colleague, coworker, team member. One CEO called it the glue holding their e-commerce business together, which is a lot, but also⌠you see why. It lives in Slack and plugs into 3,000+ tools, so instead of jumping between tabs, you just ask for the thing. Pull Stripe against HubSpot, check Sentry alerts, spin up a campaign brief, build a landing page, send a report upstairs. It all happens there.
It has already hit top 5 on Product Hunt with 130 comments, is SOC 2 certified, and your data does not train models.One user said it was the first time AI felt like a real coworker, which is either exciting or slightly concerning depending on your week.
The bad news about code reviews
By Jaid Jashim (core developer, GraphBit)
âI recently noticed a disturbing pattern with one of our most promising Intern/Junior Engineers.
- Month 1: They were shipping features daily. Fast. Hungry.
- Month 2: The velocity slowed down.
- Month 3: Silence began..
âThey hadn't opened a Pull Request in 2/3 days, even though their tasks were marked 'In Progress'.
âI assumed the worst: Burnout? Disengagement? Maybe they are overemployed?
I pulled them into a 1:1 to ask what was blocking the work. The answer floored me.â
Leaderboard highlights





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 weâve recently published.
