gm legends, happy Wednesday.
Here’s today’s lineup: Airbook pulls data from tools like HubSpot, GA4, Stripe and Zendesk, learns the schema, writes the joins, and gives you charts you can actually use; Reeroll is a chat-first editor for short clips so you cut video without wrestling a timeline; Autumn handles pricing, metering and entitlements on Stripe without the webhook circus.
P.S. Building something new? Tell us about it → editorial@producthunt.co 🫶

Reeroll is a chat-first video editor for short clips. Pick a template, drop in your assets or links, and it pulls what it needs from your site. Tweak in the thread, skip the timeline, export something that looks finished.
🔥 Our Take: Timeline scrubbing is where projects go to die. Talking your way to a finished clip is the first tool I’ve seen that might keep momentum intact. If it really grabs logos, text and footage from a link and lets you steer without a maze of panels, that turns “I should make a product video” into “I posted one at lunch.”

Airbook pulls your mess into one place. It connects to HubSpot, GA4, Stripe, Zendesk, Snowflake, Postgres and friends, learns the schema, writes the SQL, joins across sources, and spits out charts and dashboards you can actually use. When you’re ready, it pushes segments to the tools that do the work.
🔥 Our Take: Every team swears they have a 360 view, then spends Friday exporting ten CSVs and pasting screenshots into a deck. If this really knows your tables and can join product, CRM, and billing without babysitting, you stop guessing and start showing receipts. Give me revenue by cohort in one shot and I will stop yelling at spreadsheets.

Autumn wires pricing, metering, credits and feature access in a few API calls. It sits on Stripe, tracks usage, handles rollovers, and keeps entitlements in one place so you are not gluing cron jobs to a spreadsheet.
🔥 Our Take: Ask any dev what ruined their weekend. It was Stripe events, proration math, and a homegrown entitlements service that drifted out of sync. This is the boring part done right. Plans live in one brain, who gets what is clear, and metering is a knob instead of a rescue mission. I would rather build the product than babysit billing.

Aleksandar Blazhev wants to know: “How do you learn in 2025?”
In other words, when everything is a course, a clip, a cohort, or a chatbot, what actually sticks? Are you building first and googling later, binging YouTube and newsletters, or running spaced-repetition with notes that don’t rot?
Got a system that works or a weird ritual that does?