gm builders, happy Thursday.
Todayâs lineup: a prompt-to-prototype engine that sketches UI from a single sentence, an idea-to-live-site genie that builds the app while youâre still explaining it, and a one-command translator that drops 300 languages into your repoâno CSV circus required.Â
P.S. Got a launch that deserves the spotlight? Pitch us at editorial@producthunt.co đ«¶

Stitch is a Google experiment that turns a plain-language promptâor a quick sketchâinto a full UI mock-up plus matching frontend code in minutes. Hit generate, tweak a few settings, then export the screens to Figma or grab the code and run. No CSS spelunking, no boilerplate setup.
đ„ Our Take: Figma plugins have tried this for years, but watching a blank canvas pop to life from a two-line prompt still feels like cheating. Great for hammering out a concept fast; just be ready to tidy the layers before a real dev sees the file.

Macaly lets you describe an idea in plain English (or literally just talk) and spits out a live web app, frontend, backend, hosting, the lot. No editors to set up, no boilerplate hunts, just a shareable URL in a couple of minutes.
đ„ Our Take: Itâs like scribbling on a napkin and finding the sketch running online before the ink dries. Perfect for restless tinkerers, mildly terrifying for devs who bill by the hour. Refactor before bragging, though. Instant code still needs a comb-through.

Algebras AI bolts onto a Next.js repo, scoops up every string, and spits out ready-to-use locale files for 300-plus languages. It parks all text in one dashboard, flags places where German words would bulldoze a button, and lets you swap in any LLM or human reviewer for final polish.
đ„ Our Take: Handing a giant CSV to the teammate who âtook some Spanishâ is how launch-day typos and broken layouts happen. One CLI run with Algebras gets you clean translations first, native eyes second, panic never.

Lina fired off a relatable prompt: âWhatâs the task you dread as a founder but canât dodge?â
Replies came fast. Cold outreach and follow-ups topped the pain chart, with founders admitting theyâd rather face a dentist than an empty inbox. Paperwork and legal docs got equal groansâGDPR banners, tax forms, the whole snooze pile. A couple of folks singled out social-media posting (zero dopamine when the post flops), while others pointed to cash-flow spreadsheets and dreaded investor calls.
Common thread: every startup has an unglamorous chore that nobody escapes. Worth a skim if youâre knee-deep in emails and wondering if everyone else is suffering too.