The Leaderboard
Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterday’s top ten launches. That’s it.
In 2018, we saw a version of
Brizzly launch for social media quitters. It was like a Twitter “substitute,” where users could type what they’re thinking, hit send and get a dopamine hit.
“Brizzly was my favorite Twitter client before Twitter killed off all the Twitter clients. They invented the summaries that explain what’s trending and why. (Twitter added them way later.) I cannot wait to use the new Brizzly.” - Brian
Today, Brizzly is launching
a new iteration of its Twitter client. For $6 per month, you can now “edit” tweets using Brizzly; the app gives you an undo button and auto-deletion features. 👀
How it works: The undo button is really a set delay between when a person sends their tweet and when it actually posts (the length of the delay is up to you — it can be up to 10 minutes). If you choose to “redo” your tweet, Brizzly will also let you make changes to the copy and then delete your old tweet. It’s as close to editing tweets as it gets right now since Twitter founder Jack Dorsey has said it will probably never happen.
If you want to use Brizzly’s auto-delete feature, you can set a time period (anywhere from 24 hours to one month) that ensures your tweets delete after you send them. You can also “fave to save” your favorite tweets to save them from being deleted.
Some more products to improve your Twitter experience: 👇
🐦
Refined Twitter for a simplified UI
🐦
Twitter Lite for faster connection speeds
🐦
Twitter Try to tweet from your desktop
🐦
Flitter for more customization on Twitter
Yesterday,
we wrote about the novelty of short, one-on-one video calls with the people in your life who you normally don’t make time to catch up with. Today we’re looking at one-on-one video calls with people who are in your life in a different way, meaning you follow them on Instagram. 🤳
Superpeer just raised $2 million to help influencers and experts making money with one-on-one video calls. The idea is reminiscent of Cameo,
the app where fans can pay celebrities for video shout outs, but Superpeer intends to support “the knowledge economy.” 👋
“Creators and influencers get paid for all the knowledge they share, helping them create more personalized platform through which they can connect with their fans in a more meaningful way. We hope soon, every Twitter bio, every Github repo, Linkedin, Dribbble profile say, every Youtube video ends with ‘if you want to connect with me or have any questions, please book a time with me,” - Superpeer Maker Devrim Yasar wrote on Product Hunt.
As a follower, Superpeer can help answer your follow-up questions after you, say, watch a how-to video from a YouTube creator. Through these one-on-one videos, you can have an in-depth, brain-picking types of conversations with experts and Superpeer will handle all the logistics for booking the actual call. In that regard, it’s a platform for monetized virtual “coffee meetings” with in-demand people more than anything. ☕️
Would you pay money for this?
Tell us in the comments.
Here’s what early adopters think:
“Making a more professional-focused service that's kind of like Calendly meets Cameo is so well timed given the rise of the influencer market.“ - Chris
“I hope it takes off and becomes a viable way for influencers to make a living without sponsorships and ads” - Ramy
“Easier than Patreon.” - Julia
“When life gets busy, I’ve often found myself struggling to maintain meaningful relationships with people who matter to me. Living far away from my close friends and family has often been lonely. And as a startup cofounder, I’m always at work putting out fires (usually one’s that I’ve created), making it hard to make time for calls. Unintentionally, I often neglect the most important part of my life: people.“ - Brian Li, Maker at Glimpse
Glimpse, an app for two-minute, one on one video calls with your friends (and friends of friends) is looking to change that. Li, along with co-founder Helena Merk, built Glimpse in seven days. The first version of the app looked more like Chatroulette, but after Glimpse was rejected from the App store, the founders speculated that building an app that let friends and friends of friends have short video chats might be more valuable. 🙌
The result is a hybrid between quick text messages and one-hour calls — two-minute video calls to quickly say hi. In light of college campuses shutting down around world, the product could also be perfectly timed. 🤳
“We learned just a few hours ago that Duke too would be shifting to a remote campus for the remainder of the semester. It’s frustrating to know that we will miss out on not only the academic but social experience of one of the most formative parts of our lives. Our launch of Glimpse is coincidentally timely. I’m excited to join rooms of my friends who normally would be down the hall and have meaningful conversations. I want an authentic view into my friends’ lives, not the highlight reel of Instagram and FB.” - Mary Gooneratne, an employee at Glimpse, wrote on Product Hunt.
Will people use this instead of FaceTime and texting? Some thoughts from the PH community:
“Investing an entire hour when a friend calls is a lot, so when I’m busy I don’t pick up. That’s led to a few months of no contact…totally on me. But if my friends had sent me a ‘glimpse’ instead, and I knew the call would be two minutes, I would be SO down to take a break from my work.“ - Karthik
“I love the concept of limiting calls to two minutes — absolutely a game changer in terms of efficient communication.” - Lincoln
“Love the idea of catching a glimpse into my friends' life. Definitely neglect a ton of relationships when life gets too busy.” - Eric
Would you use this? Try it out and tell us what you think
here.
The Makers behind
DoNotPay, a “robot lawyer” that helps you dispute parking tickets and the like, launched a new product this week. It’s a
subscription sharing Chrome extension, where people can share their online subscriptions to services like Spotify, Netflix, Amazon Prime, Disney + and Hulu without giving away their password. 💬
How it works: Once you install the Chrome extension, you can generate a share link from whatever subscription service you’re logged in to. You can then copy the link to share or enter the email address of the person you want to share your account with, and that’s it. There isn’t a limit on how many people you can share the link with, but you may get booted off your account if you and too many of your friends are streaming simultaneously. It’s important to note that both the sender and the recipient need to have the Chrome extension installed to benefit from this arrangement, and that the actual account owner can revoke sharing whenever they want. And while the Chrome extension is free, DoNotPay plans to use it to publicize it’s robot lawyer services.
How it actually works: DoNotPay shares logged-in sessions by encrypting cookies for the website that is shared.
The idea is to help people save money by sharing and, ahem, trading subscriptions with each other. For example, if you have an Amazon Prime account but no Netflix account, you can swap access with your friend who has Netflix but not Amazon. 👀
Speaking of streaming, MSCHF (the “Banksy of the Internet”
that talked to us a while back) just launched Allthestreams.fm, where they’re “pirating” content from Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, HBONow, Prime Video and Showtime (because they have subscriptions). They’re essentially broadcasting a continuous stream of one random show from each “channel,” which plays live on their website. At the time of writing, The Office was streaming. Kind of brilliant. 📺
Happy (belated) International Women’s Day! 🎉
ICYMI: IWD was yesterday, and to celebrate we’re highlighting women makers and their infinite wisdom. Every day, we see women launch their creations on Product Hunt, where they’ve shared things like
how to finance an at-home reproductive testing startup, how to
make your startup safe for transgender people, how to
make crypto useful for young people, how to
build an unconventional product for women and
how parenthood can change how you think about your job.
We’ve gathered some of our favorite nuggets of advice from empowering makers and startup leaders below. Enjoy! 💪
Cynthia Huang, CEO at
Altcoin Fantasy, shares how becoming a crypto founder
helped her get over her imposter syndrome.
“As a new founder, you now not only have to do that thing that you have no experience in, but you have to excel at it in order to make your company a success. The downside? It can feel like you’re constantly failing. The upside? Getting over your fear of failure really fast because it slaps you in the face over and over until you either adapt or stop being a founder.”
Sophia Amoruso, CEO at Girlboss, discusses her experience learning the new meaning of “product,” and
how she set out to build a product that’s accessible to everyone.
“For women who were able to buy my book — that was a luxury. I’ve had women tell me that they couldn’t afford my book, so they checked it out from the library, then were able to get a job, and then bought the book because they could then afford it. That’s the girl I want to make sure has the opportunity to be part of this platform because she’s the person who needs it most.”
Check Warner, Partner at Ada Ventures, talks about how privilege has led to venture capital’s lack of accessibility, and
what steps we can take to address societal inequalities.
“Unless we talk about this reality and take steps to address it, I don’t believe anything will change. Some of the key drivers behind venture capital’s lack of accessibility involves the money needed to have a seat at the table or start a VC fund in the first place. These roles are preserved for the very few.“
Steph Smith, Maker of
FeMake,
Eunoia,
Make Yourself Great Again and
nomad (hubb), shares her experience
learning how to code, and how that taught her that she was often her biggest blocker.
“For years, I told myself that others who had found success in tech were cut from a different cloth, and given different opportunities than I was given. While some of these notions may hold truth in specific scenarios, I had built a habit of making these assumptions without properly vetting their accuracy. Most of the stories I told myself were myths.“
Jenny Gyllander, founder of
Thing Testing, talks about
how she grew her side project to a full-time gig.
“At the beginning, I struggled to identify if I was building this more for VCs or for consumers. But what I think is a common trait among VCs and consumers who follow me is curiosity. People tell me that they’ve bought things I’ve reviewed and founders tell me that VCs contact them after being reviewed. It’s great to be a part of that.”
Allison Esposito Medina, founder of
Hire Tech Ladies, shares how
she bootstrapped a business rooted in community.
“Although we've been profitable from day one, being bootstrapped means having to problem solve creatively, plan carefully, and make all the right bets at the right time (pressure!). On the flip side, being bootstrapped means we've had to be laser-focused and prioritize on an almost daily basis. Those are good things for any community and any business, so it's both a blessing and a challenge.”
With increased concerns over coronavirus, more and more employees will be working from home over the next few weeks. In Seattle, companies like Amazon, Google, Facebook and Microsoft have shut down various offices and requested that employees stay home out of precaution. In San Francisco, Lyft and Dropbox also advised their employees to go home. LinkedIn is even conducting all of its job interviews virtually.
It’s obvious that tools like Slack and Zoom (which already
saw its stock climb) will help, but what other tools can help your team prepare for a period of remote work? Our team at Product Hunt is fully distributed, spanning a myriad of timezones every day. Besides Slack and Zoom, we use tools like Trello, Quip, Invision, and 1Password to say in sync.
Some lesser known remote tools worth checking out right now:
📝
Taskade lets your team take notes and chat in a unified work space
“Taskade is easy to use and combines the best elements of a simple Todo-list with powerful workflow templates that make managing projects and teams a breeze.“ - Cody
👀
Tandem is a virtual “office“ for remote and distributed teams
“Tandem has put a lot of time into delivering a beautiful app that makes it dead-simple to talk with your team.” - Gustaf
🖥
CoScreen lets you literally share screens
“There is huge potential for tools like this. It could revolutionize streaming, pair programming, and really all kinds of collaborative jam sessions with remote workers.” - Alexander
💬
Humble Dot helps managers make meetings more efficient (we use this!)
“We are not able to meet weekly in person so this has been a huge time saver and has allowed us all to stay on the same page.” - Lucia
📹
Loom is like Slack, but with videos
“I use it a lot when product testing, it's so much easier to explain when I find a bug to our developers, also works great for recording calls and doing demos or tutorials.” - Adelaida
🎵
Flow State emails you two hours of free music for focusing every day
“I’m always looking for more focus music, so I appreciate the curation” - Tom
🎙
Krisp Mac lets you mute the background noise during calls
“Works like a charm for webinars and meetings. Strongly recommend.” - Gilles
🙌
Slido makes meetings more interactive with quizzes and polls
“Crowdsourcing the best ideas and questions within your teams, with a simple command in Slack. Looking forward to using this for our brainstorming sessions.” - Martin
⏰
Time Zone Converter lets you calculate the time for your teammates
“You've solved my biggest pain.” - Vitaliy
👏
Remote Team is an all-in-one HR platform for distributed teams
“It definitely beats spreadsheets and bank issues while transferring funds around the world.” - Dana
💻
GroWrk lets you rent home work stations
“GroWrk is looking to solve a growing and much needed issue— how to support remote workers in a scalable and cost-efficient manner.“ - Miguel
Twitter is finally joining the
Stories revolution. It was just reported that the social media company is testing ephemeral tweets — dubbed “fleets” (lol) — that disappear after 24 hours.
Fleets are intended to appeal to Twitter users who are typically turned off by the permanent nature of normal tweets. But Fleets also differ from regular tweets in that they can’t be retweeted, they don’t have likes, and people can only respond to them via DM to the original tweeter.
Actually, fleets remind us less of Instagram Stories and more of Snapchat messages. Right now, fleets are only being tested in Brazil, but we’re closely monitoring the situation. Do you think you’ll use fleets?
Share your thoughts here. 💬
Speaking of Twitter, we’ve seen a number of Twitter-adjacent products launch in the past few months. There was
an app for making your feed less overwhelming,
a tool that turns Twitter screenshots into beautiful photos,
a site for findings your dream Twitter username,
an API to hide Twitter replies,
a bot to find gigs on Twitter, and even
an index to graph public opinion of presidential candidates (based on tweets).
If you really want to go down the Twitter rabbit hole,
check this out. 🐦
Today’s Daily Digest was crafted by Product Hunt and sponsored by our friends at SafetyWing.
SafetyWing just launched
Remote Health, the first global health insurance built specifically for remote teams.
The future of work is looking increasingly flexible. Companies around the world are more open to remote work than ever before. Offering competitive working conditions for top talent without geographical restrictions can open new doors for companies and employees alike.
According to the Buffer and AngelList State of Remote Work
Report 2020, 98% of 3,000+ remote workers surveyed want to continue working remotely, and 97% would recommend it to others.
Of course regardless of location, we all face health challenges sometimes.
Remote Health can help with:
😁 Dental
👶 Maternity
💉 Vaccinations and screenings
🏥 Hospitalization
💵 $0 - $250 deductible options
💰 $1M overall limit
🤕 Doctor’s visits
💊 Prescriptions
🚁 Medical evacuations
SafetyWing’s ultimate mission is to build a social safety net for the first country on the internet. What they mean by this is full insurance, retirement plans, and eventually even full citizenship that anyone can be a part of. With Remote Health you can insure everyone under the same conditions, wherever they live or move to.
SafetyWing has already insured 20,000 people around the world. Check out what some of the community have said:
“As someone who aspires to work remotely, this seems like the first valuable healthcare solution I've seen so far.” — Aleksa Jovanovic
“A great step towards making remote work more sustainable and manageable.” — Josh Lindsay
Last week Citroen unveiled its answer to the question of sustainable urban transportation. Ami promises to be a compact yet comfortable 2-seater electric car that can be customized with six color choices.
As well as being a green and agile solution to getting about town, Ami can be driven without a formal drivers license. This means that, in France at least, this mode of transport is accessible to teens as young as 14.
Would you let your teen drive around in one of these? Early reactions from the community seem in favor:
“I want one. Love this.” -Andrew Jernigan
“A very impressive vehicle! I could see these doing very well in Vancouver” -Daylen Sawchuk
“Awesome work by Citroen.” -Josselin Colletta
Of course this scooter-meets-car isn’t the first electric vehicle on the scene, but it might just be the cutest. In the past year we’ve seen multiple new electric options emerge:
⚡️ Cyber Truck
🚗 Tesla Model Y
🚙 Porsche Taycan
🚘 Mustang Mach E
🏎 Aston Martin Rapide E
🚙 Nikola NZT
A few months ago, Maker Abhinav Chhikara noticed a trend on Instagram and LinkedIn where creators were sharing “micro-blogs” through carousel posts.
“Some of my favorite designers had started sharing their learning process on Instagram, and I was finding tremendous value in it,” - Abhinav wrote on Product Hunt.
However, it then became hard for Abhinav to refer back to these posts that were giving him creative fuel. Enter:
Booklets.io. 👀
Booklets.io is an Instagram library of sorts; it combines these education-oriented posts on social media into bite-sized learnings around product design, UX, marketing and branding, among other things. This is particularly useful for self-taught designers, marketers and creators who are unsure about which online courses would be the most valuable to them. 📚
“One of the problems self-taught designers, marketers and creators face is that online courses are useful only if you know exactly what you need to learn and want to explore in depth. But while starting out, often you don't know how vast the topic is. With my interviews with early users, I've found a lot of them using Booklets to explore the breadth of an industry before they decide to start learning.” - Abhinav
What do you think of bite-sized learning?
Share your thoughts here.
Some early thoughts from the PH community:
“This is hands down the best thing I have seen in this month. So valuable! I probably have hundreds of screenshots on my phone from those IG micro-blogs and they will probably be lost and forgotten soon.“ - Dominik
“Love the design and format. This kind of synopsis could help me decide if I should read something.“ - Ramnath
“I'm thinking about getting into UX more seriously, and this seems like an amazing resource I can use to start learning“ - Vjeko














