April 6th, 2026
NASA in your menu bar
Bugs, moonshots, and steadier video
gm legends, happy Monday
Glassbrain is for the point where staring at logs stops helping and you just want to replay the broken step, Moonshot puts NASA’s Artemis II mission in your menu bar for the exact kind of person who wants lunar telemetry next to Slack, and PixVerse V6 is trying to make AI video hold a shot without drifting off into nonsense.
Logs are not enough anymore

Glassbrain gives AI apps a visual trace tree so you can see exactly where something broke, swap the input, and replay that step without redeploying. It works with OpenAI and Anthropic, supports deterministic snapshots or live replays, and throws in fix suggestions and diff view so debugging feels less like reading a wall of JSON.
🔥 Our Take: The replay bit is the whole thing. Finding the bad run is one problem. Reproducing it cleanly without messing with staging, redeploying, or digging through logs for half an hour is the part that usually wastes the day.
Checkout should not feel this hard

NMI’s SaaS Payments Guide is basically a field guide for fixing checkout friction before it starts costing you customers. It covers the usual payment-flow mistakes, how to design a smoother journey, and what a scalable SaaS payments setup actually looks like when it is done right. Less clunky checkout, less guesswork, better odds people actually make it through. (Promoted)
NASA in your menu bar

Moonshot is a macOS menu bar app that tracks NASA’s Artemis II mission in real time. It shows countdowns to key lunar flyby and return moments, mission phases, elapsed time, crew info, and a space-themed Earth-Moon-Orion timeline, all using public NASA mission data.
🔥 Our Take: This is such a specific kind of nerd project, which is exactly why it works. The fun of it is not just knowing when something launches. It is having the whole mission quietly sitting up there on your Mac like a tiny space desk toy with actual telemetry.
AI video can finally hold a shot

PixVerse V6 adds better camera control, steadier character motion, multi-shot generation, native audio, and up to 15 seconds of 1080p output. The whole update is basically about making AI video feel less like one nice-looking moment and more like something you can actually build with.
🔥 Our Take: AI video has been good at the first five seconds for a while. The minute you ask it to keep a character steady, carry momentum, or hold a scene together, things usually get weird. This update is clearly going after that problem.
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