March 30th, 2026
Manage your site on the go
This newsletter was brought to you byLightfieldYour static site can leave the desk
gm legends, happy Monday.
Git Blog lets static site people post from their iPhone without breaking the whole Git-backed workflow, Halo is the latest entry in the everything-has-a-camera-now era except this time it is headphones, and Blood Sugar Journal is a much nicer home for glucose tracking than the usual sad medical app experience.
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 static site can leave the desk now

Git Blog lets you write Markdown posts, add photos, set front matter, and publish straight to your GitHub-backed site from your iPhone. It works with Jekyll, Hugo, Eleventy, Astro, Next.js, Gatsby, Hexo, and most static site setups, with drafts staying on-device until you are ready to push or open a PR.
🔥 Our Take: Static site people love owning the whole setup until they actually need to post something on the move. Then it is suddenly notes app now, real blog later. This fixes that in a pretty direct way. If your blog lives in Git, your phone should not be the thing that breaks the workflow.
You're being watched

Rohan kicked off a thread with a very current B2B discomfort: AI note-takers, silent recorders, and meeting assistants are quietly becoming normal, but the consent part is still a mess. His bigger point is not just would you stay on the call. It is whether business calls are sliding into a record first, ask later culture where your conversation can be transcribed, stored, and fed into who-knows-what without anyone really spelling it out. Good thread if you have ever felt that weird little trust drop the second a bot joins the meeting.
Your headphones are filming now

Halo Vision Headphones are exactly what they sound like: headphones with a built-in 14MP camera. They shoot 1080p video while you listen, with stereo drivers and a configurable action button, so the pitch is basically capture what you see without reaching for your phone.
🔥 Our Take: Everything is getting a camera now. Sunglasses, pins, now headphones. My main question is still why. I get the hands-free angle, but this really feels like one of those products where the category exists before anyone has proved the habit.
A better home for your glucose data

Blood Sugar Journal is an iPhone app for tracking glucose, insulin, meals, and trends without the usual clunky medical-app feel. It turns raw logs into clearer reports, syncs with iCloud, and is built to help you actually spot patterns instead of just dumping numbers on a screen.
🔥 Our Take: A lot of health apps still feel like they were designed to remind you that being sick is admin. This goes in a better direction. Cleaner, calmer, and more focused on making the data understandable enough to be useful at your next doctor visit, instead of just giving you another place to type things in.
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Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterday’s top ten launches. That’s it.
