gm legends, happy Thursday.
Here’s today’s power trio: a chat bar that turns any webpage into a one-click research sidekick; a relentless timer badge reminding you exactly how much life you’ve burned on every tab; and a wrist gadget that runs real-world habit experiments so you stop guessing what actually works.
Pour that espresso, pick your weapon, and let’s own this Thursday.
P.S. Launching soon? We’d love to hear about it → editorial@producthunt.co 🫶

Pulse is a wrist gadget that tracks your sleep, energy and habits then guides you through real experiment like cold showers, screen time cutoffs, and caffeine timing, to show what actually moves the needle. No generic advice, no monthly fees.
🔥 Our Take: Staring at another pie chart won’t make you healthier. Pulse forces you to run live tests on your own body so you ditch guesswork and see results. Skip caffeine after lunch and watch your afternoon fog lift, or lock down your screen time and actually fall asleep faster.

Mori puts your real age or a live countdown on every Chrome tab, giving you a constant reminder of time slipping away as you browse.
🔥 Our Take: Your feed just turned into a mirror and it stings to watch seconds vanish right before your eyes. That tiny badge will wreck your doomscroll habit faster than any blocker.

You A/B test product features - why not test your body? Pulse lets you run experiments on your sleep, activity, and vitals. Wondering if late-night calls kill your recovery? Or if morning cardio sharpens your 2PM focus? Track inputs, measure outputs, and find your edge. It’s the insight engine for founders and operators who treat themselves like a system.
5,000+ high-performers are already running their own experiments. Start testing what actually works for you: pulse.site

Browse Anything adds a chat bar to any webpage so you can type “summarize this”, “find all email links” or “compare those prices” and get instant answers without endless scrolling or copy-pasting.
🔥 Our Take: It slashes through bloated pages and hands you the data you actually need. Sure, some messy sites fight back, but when it clicks you’ll wonder how you ever survived manual web drudgery.

Jake asked, “What’s the weirdest thing you’ve ever asked AI to do?” and people answered with wild prompts: drafting love letters to houseplants, scripting sushi-chef murder mysteries, diagnosing dreams about chattering toilets, even mixing cocktail recipes from toothpaste and pickle juice. Some pushed it further, “translate my cat’s meows into relationship advice” or “write my diary in Shakespearean English.”
So the bigger question: how far will you push these tools, and what do your oddball requests reveal about where AI fits in your day-to-day life?