March 19th, 2026
Design apps in seconds
This newsletter was brought to you byLightfieldGoogle wants your rough draft
gm legends, happy Thursday.
Stitch 2.0 is built for turning half-baked product ideas into actual UI, Lucent watches your session replays so your team does not have to, and NemoClaw is NVIDIA putting some rules around always-on OpenClaw agents before they wander off and do something stupid.
Google wants the half-baked version

Stitch 2.0 is Google’s design canvas for turning rough inputs into UI. You can drop in text, images, and code on one canvas, spin up prototypes fast, and keep the whole thing consistent with built-in design systems and a Design.md file.
🔥 Our Take: The point here is you do not have to clean up the idea first. Screenshots, stray copy, rough code, random references just throw the pile in and start shaping it. That is a much more honest starting point than pretending every product idea begins as a neat Figma file.
Why AI never mentions your product

Imed wrote a post about a pretty bleak founder realization: you can have a solid product, real customers, and decent growth, and still be completely invisible when people ask ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Gemini for tools in your category. His whole point is that AI discovery rewards a different kind of content than normal startup taste. Less clever copy, more direct answers. Less pretending competitors do not exist, more comparison pages. Less vague claims, more original data AI can actually grab onto. Good one if you have ever assumed a good product would eventually speak for itself.
What if you only had to do your call prep routine once — 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 — 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.
Your session replays learned to triage

Lucent plugs into PostHog, watches session replays 24/7, and sends bugs or UX issues with reproduction context straight to Slack or Linear as users hit them. The maker pitch is pretty direct: the data is already sitting in session replays, but nobody has time to watch thousands of them by hand.
🔥 Our Take: Session replay has quietly become a storage problem. Teams collect a mountain of footage, then only open it once something is already broken. Lucent is betting replay tools should work more like triage than archives. That is the interesting part here.
OpenClaw got house rules

NVIDIA NemoClaw is an open-source stack for running OpenClaw with guardrails. It installs OpenShell in one command, adds policy-based privacy and security controls, and can run Nemotron locally so always-on agents have a safer place to work.
🔥 Our Take: OpenClaw got attention because it felt a little unhinged. NemoClaw is NVIDIA stepping in and saying fine, but put some rules around it. Same always-on agent idea, just with sandboxing, privacy controls, and local compute so it feels less like a toy and more like something you could actually trust near real work.
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Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterday’s top ten launches. That’s it.
