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The Roundup

March 1st, 2026

Bumble, but with AI

This newsletter was brought to you byWispr Flow

Burn your profile photo

gm legends. It’s Sunday.

This week: early takes on Notion Custom Agents, Perplexity Computer, and Wispr Flow for Android; a free tool for finding better flights; why you can’t seem to make any user videos; and how necessary are Bumble’s new AI features anyway? Plus, five of our favorite launches from the past week.Ā 

You don’t have to swipe right to read this newsletter. Just scroll down, legend.

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

IN THE NEWS

Bumble adds AI

Bumble, the dating app where women (used to) message first, wants you to lose the sunglasses and beanie. Maybe the fish photos, too.

The second-most-downloaded dating app is rolling out an AI feature that analyzes your bios and photos and provides friendly suggestions. Like: ā€œNo one knows which of these 15 people in the group shot is youā€ or ā€œHow about a little bit more about you than ā€˜Sup’?ā€ Sure, your friends could have told you that, but who needs them when you’ve got AI?

The Canada version of the app is also piloting a feature that will wingman you and prod you to just ask the person out already if the conversation stalls. Or you could, and we’re just spitballing here, learn how to text.

Despite Bumble’s solid market share, it needs to keep pace with Match Group, the company behind Tinder, Hinge, and a zillion other dating apps. In November, Match partnered a disappointing earnings report with an announcement that it was testing out a new AI feature, Chemistry.

Chemistry asks users questions and (with permission) accesses their photos to learn what they like. That data is ostensibly used to suggest better matches. If the AI sees a lot of restaurant photos, maybe you’ll get paired with a foodie. Outdoors a lot? Here are other people who like beaches and mountains.

With most singles clustered in the top few networks, we don’t get a lot of dating app launches these days, but when we do, they do well. Each of the last four dating apps launches ended the day in the top 5:

  • Vibecoder.date is a joke that turned into a real app helping vibecoders find love ā€œright in your IDEā€ (January 2026)
  • We2 gives those who already have a partner fun questions to strengthen their relationship (December 2025)
  • Lettre.app is for sending those long, romantic love letters — or just for writing to pen pals (June 2025)
  • Shredder, the ā€œTinder for skiers or snowboarders,ā€ might be blowing up post-Olympics (January 2025)

Ā 

WHY I BUILT THIS

Like Google Flights for private planes

By Lily, founder of Aviato

Ā I travel constantly, and at some point flying just became… dreadful? Like airlines will tell you a flight is $180, and then by the time you add a bag, pick a seat that isn't a middle seat in the back next to the bathroom, and God forbid, try to bring your dog, you're at $300+. And you haven't even gotten to the airport yet.

And then you GET to the airport. Two hours early. Shoes off. Water confiscated. Elbow war with a stranger for three hours.Ā 

I stumbled onto semi-private flying a while back, and I genuinely could not believe it was real. You pull up, park for free literally outside the door, walk in, board in 15 minutes, and suddenly you're on a small, beautiful plane getting served champagne with your dog sitting next to you. It felt like flying in the 50s. Like when getting on a plane was actually an event, and you got what you paid for.Ā 

The problem? Finding these flights is SO hard. Every operator — JSX, Aero, Tradewind, Slate, and more — only flies certain routes, and they all live on their own separate websites.Ā 

Ā 

FROM THE FORUMS

Why don't you make a video?

You know you should be making a product video, but you’re as frozen as HBO Max during the Game of Thrones finale. Ashutosh Raj has noticed. The Clueso growth guru said he thought it might be something skills-based: not knowing how to edit or design. But when he started listening to users, he was surprised to hear that most just ā€œdidn’t know what to say.ā€

So he wants to know: ā€œWhen you think about creating product videos for your team or your product, where do you actually get stuck?ā€

Ā 

REVIEWS

Three big launches, three quick takes

A ton ofĀ Product Hunt faves had launches this week. Here are three that stuck out:Ā 

  • Notion launched Custom Agents. The tagline: ā€œAnything you can do in Notion, your Agent can do for you.ā€ Michael Brooks has tested out the feature and thinks it’s fantastic, but says the price point seems more for enterprise. He writes:Ā ā€œA few days of running some reports and reformatting website content into a few pages cost over 7,000 credits—that's $70 of credits over 5 days for pretty routine tasks. And that's for a single Agent.

Ā 

  • Perplexity launched the Perplexity Computer, which has a very similar tagline: ā€œEverything AI can do, Perplexity does for you.ā€ Joao Seabra is pretty excited that this means more than an AI assistant. He says:Ā ā€œThe massively multi-model architecture is what separates this from everything else launching in this space. Routing each subtask to the best specialized model rather than forcing one LLM to do everything is the right call, and it mirrors how serious AI pipelines are actually built today."

Ā 

  • Wispr Flow for Android — ā€œAI dictation that turns messy speech into polished textā€ — is now a reality. Our CEO Rajiv has FOMO:Ā ā€œWhile I love the iOS functionality, it is a bit high-friction to get into Wispr Flow because of limitations on iOS's side. I'm really intrigued (and envious of Android users) to see what Wispr built in Android with less system restrictions!ā€

Ā 

Weekly

Leaderboard highlights

KiloClaw
KiloClaw — Hosted OpenClaw. No Mac mini required.KiloClaw is a fully managed, cloud hosted OpenClaw, so you get an agent running in under a minute instead of wrestling with Docker and SSH. You click to deploy, tap into 500 plus models through Kilo Gateway, set up scheduled automations, and plug into chat platforms like Slack, Telegram and Discord, while Kilo handles restarts, monitoring and infra behind the scenes.
Stitch by Google
Stitch by Google — Turn napkin sketches into production-ready UI in seconds.Stitch by Google Labs is an AI design tool that turns text prompts or rough wireframes into responsive UI for web and mobile. It runs in the browser, uses Google’s Gemini models under the hood, and can export clean HTML/CSS plus layouts straight into Figma so designers and devs can keep working in their usual tools.
Superset
Superset — Run an army of Claude Code, Codex, etc. on your machineSuperset is a desktop IDE built for people who run more than one coding agent at a time. You can fire up a bunch of Claude Code, Codex and friends in parallel, keep each task in its own sandboxed workspace, and watch them all from a single view instead of juggling terminals. When something finishes, you get a quick diff and an editor right there, so you can review, tweak, and ship without hopping between tools.
ElevenAgents by ElevenLabs
ElevenAgents by ElevenLabsScale conversations without scaling your team
Promoted
TypeBoost
TypeBoost — Your personal AI writing toolkit. Inside any app.TypeBoost is a macOS app that turns your favorite AI prompts into reusable actions you can trigger anywhere. Highlight text, hit a shortcut, pick an action, and it rewrites, translates, or cleans things up right inside the app you are using. You can customize prompts, choose models, use voice input, and reuse the same setup across email, docs, posts, and everything else with a text box.
Tessl
Tessl — Optimize agents skills, ship 3Ɨ better code.Tessl is a package manager and evaluation layer for agent skills. You send in the skills your agents depend on, run them through real tasks, see if they actually improve success rates, and version them properly instead of passing markdown around repos.
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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.