gm legends, happy Tuesday.
Here’s today’s lineup: a tool that turns your website into a full email funnel in seconds; a floating mini‑app maker that banishes tab chaos for good; and a browser‑only builder that scaffolds and deploys full apps without ever touching the cloud.
Fire up your favorite tool, clear the clutter, and let’s own this Tuesday.
P.S. Launching soon? We’d love to hear about it → editorial@producthunt.co 🫶

browsr makes any website a floating mini‑app. Hit your hotkey, summon it on top of any window and forget about tab overload.
🔥 Our Take: I used to have 30 tabs open and still can’t find the one I need. Now I tap a key, my site pops up, and I’m actually getting shit done. It’s ridiculous how calm my screen looks now.

Dualite Alpha runs right in your browser. Import a repo or Figma file, pick your stack, then prompt it to scaffold UI, hook up APIs, debug and deploy, all without sending your code into someone else’s servers.
🔥 Our Take: Cloud tools stash your code offsite and hope for the best. This keeps everything on your machine, scaffolding full apps at your command and letting you peek under the hood at every line. It’s no silver bullet for prod ops, but it shaves days off prototypes without the cloud drama.

Elma turns your website URL into a complete email sequence, welcome messages, win‑backs and upsells. All written in your brand’s voice in seconds.
🔥 Our Take: I threw in a landing page and five pretty solid emails showed up in seconds. It’s not perfect out of the box but cuts the writing grind in half and gets you sending campaigns without staring at a blank screen.

Helga Razinkova pointed out that in our AI‑everything world, forums and user groups feel like lifelines instead of afterthoughts. She asked whether having a real community, complete with live changelogs, peer Q&A and feature wishlists, might make or break a product today.
Replies lit up with folks saying they’d pay extra for tools backed by passionate users, share war stories in deep‑dive threads and swap hacks faster than any support ticket. Others warned that a forum can turn into ghost town if you don’t feed it.
So here’s the killer question: would you ride or die with a product just because its community has your back?