happy hump day legends! In today's leaderboard we've got: Airbnb's new services update, a bot that puts meetings on autopilot, and a tool to build apps inside Notion.
P.S. Want your launch to be featured in this newsletter? Drop us a line with your pitch at editorial@producthunt.co 🫶

Airbnb’s new Services & Experiences tab lets you tack on extras,private chefs, haircuts, kayak tours, massages, right inside the app. Book them with a stay or on their own, pay in-app, and leave a review like you would for any listing.
🔥 Our Take: Cool move: I can lock in a surf lesson without juggling ten browser tabs. Slight worry: hosts might start pitching moon-circle sound baths before I’ve unzipped my suitcase. Fingers crossed the add-ons feel helpful, not pushy.

Shadow records Zoom, Meet, and Slack calls right from your device, so no mystery avatar pops into the meeting. It transcribes the conversation, tags speakers, pulls action items and deadlines, then pushes them to tools like Asana or your inbox. You leave the call with a to-do list, not another recap doc.
🔥 Our Take: Goodbye “Recording in progress” robot voice. Shadow keeps things quiet, grabs the promises we all forget, and pings people when it’s time to deliver. Handy for sensitive calls where a join-bot feels weird, but double-check its task list before you blame the AI for missed work.

NotionApps 2.0 wraps any Notion database in a real web app. Pick your table, drag in forms and lists from a 40-piece component library, set who sees what, then click publish. It hosts the thing for you, so clients get a clean login link instead of a shared Notion view.
🔥 Our Take: We’ve all hacked together scrappy portals in Notion and then apologized for the mess. I pointed this at my content tracker and had a writer-friendly dashboard in fifteen minutes, no new logins or copy-paste exports. It still feels like Notion but finally looks like an app you meant to build.

Nika tossed out a big one: “How do you keep work from eating the rest of your life?”
Answers ran the spectrum. A few folks draw a hard line—laptop shut at 6 PM, phone on focus, quick ritual like a post-work walk to reset. Others build physical barriers: a door that closes or a coworking spot across town. One founder straight-up quit a cushy dev job so dinner with his toddler wasn’t a maybe. And yeah, someone admitted they still debug code while chewing pasta—progress is messy.
Plenty of tactics, one theme: if you don’t fence work in, it expands like foam. Worth a scroll if your Slack pings are starting to sound like a lullaby.