gm, legends. Itâs Sunday funday.
Todayâs highlights: why the AI feature you want doesnât exist, the joy of brutal feedback, how productivity tools might be zapping your productivity, and our cherry on top: the most popular products that launched this week.
Put on the kettle and relax into the read.
P.S. Launching soon? Weâd love to hear about it â editorial@producthunt.co đ«¶

Tired of SEO analytics he couldnât make sense of, Josh Nichols started building a real-time dashboard that gave him the data without the drama.Â
Three months later, he launched WebVisor so other websites could peek under the hood to see their stats. Then came the âbrutal comments.â But in a good way!
His Product Hunt launch garnered him instant feedback that he could use
Cookies? Undigestible. âNo setupâ claims? Lies! So he gave the site a makeover to get setup down to under a minute and cookies down to zero. In 48 hours, he onboarded over 100 sites. Now he wants moreânot just sites, but critiques that can lead to his next midnight makeover.
Heâs brewing a pot of coffee right now.
Just a quick note to remind you that AI canât do everything a startup staffer can. Hamza asked: âAI is everywhere...whatâs one thing it still canât do right?âÂ
Nearly every commentator agrees that AI doesnât do great at being human. Rahul thinks that its understanding of human emotion lacks âreal nuance,â and Haiqa said using it for customer support âsounded like a robot giving a TED Talk.âÂ
Zagita put this conversation about context into clear terms: Sometimes when a customer says, âGreat, thanks,â what they really mean is âFix this now or Iâm out.â You mean itâs been trained on millions of human interactions but hasnât figured out how to be passive-agressive? Maybe we should feed it our momâs texts asking why we arenât coming home this Christmas.
In the meantime, AI, maybe you can get us a coffee. Itâs not going to brew itself.

Kenedy asked, âDo you ever feel like your tools are working against you?â
Kenedy thinks with all our focus on âproductivity,â we may just have gone and âoverengineered our digital workflows.â As in, the abundance of tools mightâŠbe making us less productive. Whereas we once might have opened our (physical) notebook and scribbled down a few thoughts when the lightbulb turned on, now we have an 18-step process for capturing ideas.
So the bigger question is: Which productivity features are essential, and which are just adding friction?



