AGI in baby steps
gm legends. It’s Sunday
In this week’s roundup: Jensen Huang thinks we’ve reached AGI…kind of. We're business of ranking people now, not just products. And one founder decided to let Claude own his codebase for seven days. It went as well as you can imagine.
AGI is here, or is it?

Jensen Huang just said AGI is here, which sounds like a massive line until you look at the fine print. He was responding to Lex Fridman’s version of AGI, basically an AI that could start and run a billion-dollar company. Then, almost immediately, he undercut the sci-fi part by saying the odds of 100,000 agents building Nvidia are zero.
So this is not really a clean we-made-AGI moment. It is more a definition game. Huang was already saying in 2024 that AGI might arrive within five years depending on how you define it, which is usually a good sign that everyone in the room is using the same term to mean different things.
See where you rank on Product Hunt

We just launched the Kitty Points Leaderboard so you can see the top 1,000 community members ranked by Kitty Points across last week, last month, last year, and all time. It is a fun new way to track momentum, spot familiar names, and get a better sense of who’s been showing up lately. Also, yes, it is absolutely the kind of thing that can send you into a tiny competitive spiral once you see your own rank.
So we’re just… talking to software now?

ElevenLabs has been the go-to for voice for a while. Now they've turned that expertise into agents that actually get things done. You set one up, it talks like a real person, listens, responds, and helps handle the task — support calls, bookings, whatever the job is. Not a demo, not a "press 1 for sales" situation. It's ready to deploy. Feels like one of those shifts where the interface quietly changes. Less typing, less clicking, more just saying what needs to happen and letting it play out.
Seven days of Claude-only coding

Imed ran a seven-day experiment where Claude wrote all the code with no human review, and it went about as calmly as you would expect. It shipped some working features fast, then started breaking unrelated parts of the product, driving up API costs, dropping old data, hardcoding stuff that should have been configurable, and taking the site down with a dependency update. The post is basically a very clean reminder that code generation is not the same thing as judgment.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 we’ve recently published.
