January 28th, 2026
treasure map for real life
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gm legends, happy Wednesday.
Todayâs lineup: a tiny compass app that tells you whatâs actually in front of you and how much light youâve got left, a local AI video brain that lets you search your footage instead of scrubbing for hours, and an all-in-one AI builder that tries to take you from idea to shipped app without juggling three different backends.
Find out what youâre pointing at

Whatâs in that direction is a tiny iOS compass that actually answers the question in its name. You point your phone, and it shows nearby landmarks plus sunrise, sunset, and golden hour for where you are, so you know whatâs in front of you and how much light youâve got left without opening a full map app.
đĽ Our Take: This is for those little moments on a walk or trip where youâre half-sure thatâs the city, or thatâs the coast, but not enough to bet on it. Instead of loading maps and zooming around like a maniac, you just aim your phone and get a quick reality check plus a heads-up on whether itâs worth chasing one last bit of sun.
Is usage pricing the new default?

Jake Friedberg opened a thread asking if AI tools can really stick with classic SaaS tiers, or if usage-based pricing is basically the new normal. The core tension: GPUs are expensive and spiky, but customers still want bills they can predict.
Most people are landing on some kind of hybrid: a sane base plan plus metered usage, with very clear value metrics, live usage dashboards, caps, and alerts so no one wakes up to a nightmare invoice. Pure pay-per-use only feels okay when the value per action is painfully obvious. If youâre currently guessing between flat plans and token meters for your own product, this thread is a good reality check.
What if you only had to do your call prep routine once â ever?

You know the one. LinkedIn. Crunchbase. CRM. Inbox. Last transcript. Fifteen minutes, every time, before every call. Lightfield is an AI-native CRM that just shipped Skills. Describe any routine in plain English â and the CRM learns it. Next time: "Prep me for my call with Acme." That's it. It does the whole thing. "Score every deal in my pipeline using my criteria." Done. "Research this account the way I would." Done. Teach it how you sell and watch it go to work for you. 2,500+ startups already have.
Actually search your videos

Edit Mind is a local AI video tool that turns raw footage into something you can actually search. It runs on your machine, indexes every clip with things like objects, faces, and emotions, then lets you use natural language to jump to exact moments or spit out rough cuts without scrubbing through hours of timeline.
đĽ Our Take: Video files are still big dumb blobs on most hard drives. Having a tool that watches everything once, tags it properly, and lets you say âshow me the part where she laughs in the red jacketâ is a huge upgrade over dragging a playhead and guessing. The local part matters too â your archive stays yours.
One place to ship AI apps

Imagine is an AI builder that takes you from prompt to working product on top of Appwrite in one shot. You describe what you want and it pulls together frontend, backend, auth, database, storage, notifications, hosting, compliance, security, and scaling so you are not juggling three other platforms just to launch.
đĽ Our Take: describing yourself as the most complete AI building platform in 2026 is a brave move, but the interesting part is the ambition to replace the usual Lovable plus Supabase plus Vercel stack with one place that actually ships. If it really holds up for prototypes, internal tools, and proper apps, a lot of builders will quietly pick convenience over yet another clever demo.
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