gm legends, happy Tuesday.
Here’s today’s lineup: a pocket‑sized health ID you flash instead of fumbling forms; an AI video editor you chat with instead of wrestling timelines; and a one‑liner SDK that finally gives your agents reliable memory without spinning up a database.
Buckle up your browser, key in your hotkey, and let’s own this week.
P.S. Launching soon? We’d love to hear about it → editorial@producthunt.co 🫶

Nomadful ID puts your health info on your phone in a scannable format. Share your allergies at a restaurant, prove your age at a club, or skip the small talk at urgent care. You control what they see and for how long.
🔥 Our Take: Not every bouncer, waiter, or receptionist needs your life story. Nomadful gives you a clean, fast way to share just enough without handing over your whole medical chart. It’s like a health card, but built for actual humans.

Levio takes your raw video and turns it into something scroll-stopping. Captions, hooks, B-roll, visuals, all done for you. Want to tweak something? Just tell it what to change. No timeline headaches.
🔥 Our Take: There’s something nice about editing without touching a timeline. Levio keeps you focused on what you’re saying instead of how to crop a frame or animate a caption. It’s injecting some enjoyment into the most tedious part of content creation.

Convo is a drop-in SDK that handles memory, debugging, and persistence for your AI agents. One line of code gets you time-travel logs, multi-user threads, and storage that just works.
🔥 Our Take: If you’ve ever tried wiring memory into LangGraph, you’ve probably rage-Googled “why does my agent keep forgetting.” Convo skips the schema headaches and gives you battle-ready memory in seconds. Less infra, more shipping.

Nika spotted that 72 % of teens have tried AI companions and 31 % find those chats as rewarding as talking to real people, and she wants to know if AI characters have sneaked into your routine.
- Haiqa Irfan treats AI like a brainstorming or venting buddy, especially younger users who barely blink at it, though she still values face‑to‑face time more.
- Ivan Ralic leans on AI for quick facts and advice but walks away the moment a bot tries to pretend it’s human, it’s a respect thing.
- Ran warns that as bots get more emotionally savvy we’ll all need better AI literacy so we don’t get too attached to something that can’t actually show up for us.
Where do you land ? Daily helper, occasional novelty, or something in between?