March 20th, 2026
Give your repo superpowers
This newsletter was brought to you byHapaxYour agent belongs in Git
gm legends, happy Friday.
GitAgent wants your agent stack living where it probably should have lived all along, in Git, Room Service is for the very specific horror of a developer Mac running out of space, and GentleLimit is a screen-time app for people who do not want their focus tools acting like prison guards.
Hapax is a little unsettling in the best way.

It watches how you actually work. The apps you open before meetings, the reports you rebuild every week, the random routines you didn’t realize were routines.
Then it just… fixes them. Builds the workflow, sends the update, drops it where you already are. No prompts, no setup, no dashboard you forget to check.
Use code DEMOPH if your mornings feel like déjà vu.
Your repo is the agent now

GitAgent turns a Git repo into the actual source of truth for an agent. Memory, behavior, tools, versioning, all of it lives in the repo, so you can run the same agent across Claude, OpenAI, CrewAI, OpenClaw, and more without reformatting everything every time.
🔥 Our Take: This is really about ownership. A lot of agent work still gets trapped inside whatever framework you picked first, which means switching later turns into a rebuild. GitAgent is basically saying your agent should live where the rest of your important stuff already lives: in Git, with branches, rollbacks, and PRs.
Can AI outbuild your moat

Imed wrote a post about asking ChatGPT to build a competitor to his own product, then stress-testing that fake rival against the real market. The result was basically a good reality check: on paper, AI can spin up a very convincing competitor fast. In practice, it still cannot fake the stuff that actually takes time to build, like authority, citations, third-party coverage, and original data. Good read if you have ever wondered whether AI can clone your product faster than you can defend it.
Screen limits without the hostage situation

GentleLimit is a macOS screen-time app for people who still need the distracting apps open. Instead of blocking them outright, it keeps your usage visible with subtle signals and floating widgets so you notice when things are getting out of hand without wrecking your flow. It also stays fully on-device.
🔥 Our Take: A lot of screen-time tools act like the only way to help is to slam the door shut. GentleLimit is built around a more realistic idea: sometimes you do need Slack, YouTube, or whatever else open, you just do not want to disappear into it for an hour.
Your Mac is full of developer trash

Room Service is a Mac cleaner built for developer mess, not generic junk. It helps you see and clean things like Xcode build data, package caches, Docker, generated folders, app leftovers, duplicates, and privacy traces with a review-first workflow instead of one risky cleanup button.
🔥 Our Take: The good part is it knows developer storage problems are their own category. A normal cleaner sees clutter. A dev machine sees Docker, node_modules, build junk, old packages, random leftovers, and six things you are scared to delete. Room Service is for that.
Daily Top Products











Monday through Friday
Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterday’s top ten launches. That’s it.
