Now let's get on to last week's top headlines:
🤖OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever + AI researcher quit, sparking safety concerns.
💰 Squarespace is being acquired by Permira for $6.6 billion.
⚡ Tesla laid off its entire Supercharger team, putting its future into question.
📹 TikTok is testing a new AI-powered search functionality.
🧵 Threads is booting up a fact-checking program like Twitter’s community notes.
🤖 OpenAI has agreed a deal with Reddit to train AI on the social platform.
🐦 Twitter is officially X after the company finally changed its URL.
Voicenotes is a voice app built by the Buy Me a Coffee founder. There’s no login — open the app and hit record. Say you’re going shopping and can’t remember what deodorant you bought two weeks ago. Simply ask your AI to trawl your notes for you.
Read more | Voicenotes
🧑💻 Jijo Sunny, Aleesha John
AFFiNE, a Miro meets Notion tool, stands apart for its open-source and local-first approach. What’s under the hood of AFFiNE could potentially offer users the same exact features as Notion or Miro, but with customization and flexibility.
Read more | AFFiNE
🧑💻Jiachen He📍Singapore 💰Seed
Snaplet generates realistic seed data using AI to understand your database schema. Snaplet was founded by Peter Pistorius, who was also on the co-founding team of RedwoodJS with former GitHub founder Tom Preston-Werner.
Read more | Snaplet
🧑💻 Peter Pistorius📍Berlin 💰Pre-seed
Equals had its biggest release since its initial launch. There are three main parts to the update: a redesigned query experience, even more flexible spreadsheets, and more dashboard features.
Read more | Equals
🧑💻 Bobby Pinero, Ben McRedmond 📍SF 💰Series A 🏆GKA 2023 Best in Data
Plenty is a wealth management platform for couples. It's designed to help modern couples discuss, manage, and invest their money together. Plenty was started by a husband-wife duo in fintech (formerly Stripe and Even [acquired]).
Read more | Plenty
🧑💻 Emily Luk, Channing Allen 📍SF 💰Seed
OpenAI launched its latest model, GPT-4o. What really stood out was the voice handling. Users can ask the model a question and mid-answer, interrupt it to divert the conversation or correct it. OpenAI stressed how much more human-like this model is by showcasing its emotional reasoning capabilities. Read more | GPT-4o
Google launched a bunch of stuff including its answer to OpenAI's Sora. Veo outshines Sora by generating minute-long, 1080p videos from a single prompt. It can produce various visual styles, like landscape shots and time lapses, and allows for editing existing footage. Read more | Veo
OUR PICKS
Reap turns long videos into short clips ready to share across your socials.
Plinky is an app to easily save interesting links and remember to go back to them.
Humbo enables you to create an interactive, shareable map of your travels.
FocusOS lets you hide all the distractions on your desktop with one click.
Campana is a platform for keeping tabs on what your competitors are up to.
MAKER’S CORNER
GitHub launched a mobile app for their coding copilot tool.
Checkout Plus lets you customize every part of your Shopify checkout experience.
TestSprite is an automated, end-to-end testing solution for AI products.
Jovu is an AI tool that generates production-ready code.
SHOUTOUT
Pinecone is like a memory system for your AI projects. It’s a vector database that makes it easier to build high-performance search applications. It’s currently the fourth most shouted-out AI product on Product Hunt. The makers of Dealwise shouted out Pinecone, saying "We use a hybrid keyword and vector search to identify the best strategic and financial buyers for your business. Pinecone is fast and reliable.”
See more of the top-loved products on Product Hunt here.
Maker Stacks is our newsletter where we interview founders and find out what products they use in their stacks.
This week: Kwindla Hultman Kramer.
Kwindla is a founder of Daily, which develops infrastructure and SDKs for video and audio, with customers like ByteDance and Accenture. A former Harvard and MIT grad, Kwindla has been interested in large-scale networked systems and real-time video since his working as a grad student with Mitchel Resnick (founder of Scratch) at MIT Media Lab. Prior to founding his first company, Kwindla worked to advocate for the building of free and open-source software (in the early 2000s when doing so was controversial).
Among Kwindla’s stack, you’ll find LLM tools, video editing software, and more.