I d like to share iPhotro v4.0.0, a free and open-source, local-first photo manager that recently gained a set of advanced color grading tools.
This release focuses on giving photographers precise control over color and tone, while keeping a clean, non-destructive workflow and a familiar, macOS-like interface.
We launched dark mode for Tonkotsu earlier this week. It was written entirely by Tonkotsu with 63 completed tasks. My involvement was exclusively during planning and verification (the classic barbell shape described here).
We're looking for early users willing to test Polyvia and
give feedback. Ideal if you're:
- Building AI agents or multimodal workflows
- Working with documents heavy on charts, diagrams,
infographics
- Frustrated with RAG missing visual data What you get: Early access to Polyvia API + MCP Server Direct line to the founders for support Input on what we build next Interested? Sign up here: https://polyvia.ai/#access Or drop a comment happy to answer any questions first!
A 3-year search for a simple tool to track both personal and business finances in one place. Nothing fits.
Website owners constantly need minor edits in the admin panel. They are forced to pay specialists for 5-minute tasks. We need an AI agent that does this on command in the browser.
An indie hacker spends 20-30 hours manually cold launching each new product in directories, Reddit, and blogs. There is no tool that fully automates this and proves its effectiveness.
A freelancer often loses in proposal competitions due to the inability to quickly create personalized and visual website concepts for each job order.
A Telegram channel owner is losing their audience without understanding the reasons for unsubscriptions. There is no simple tool for automatically collecting feedback from departed subscribers.
We shipped it. Halo is your AI assistant, embedded directly on your website. Customers ask questions. Halo answers. They book appointments. Halo handles it. One script tag, 5 minutes, done.
New AI models pop up every week. Some developer tools like @Cursor, @Zed, and @Kilo Code let you choose between different models, while more opinionated products like @Amp and @Tonkotsu default to 1 model.
Curious what the community recommends for coding tasks? Any preferences?
This community helped turn a scrappy weekend project into something used by 25,000+ people from all around the world. So it felt right to share this here first:
On Jan 31, we are launching Pretty Prompt 1.0 right here on Product Hunt.
Mastra (YC W25) is launching on Product Hunt today, releasing stable 1.0 for building AI apps and agents, and announcing 300,000+ weekly npm downloads, 19,400+ GitHub stars, and production use at companies like @Replit and @WorkOS.
I had a blast working on this launch with @calcsam @smthomas3 @bookercodes and team, and wanted to share with you some thoughts we put into the ops.
For teams using Taskade, it often becomes the place where planning turns into action. Tasks, automations, and AI features all living in the same loop instead of scattered across tools.
If Taskade is part of how you run work, tell us how. What workflow did you set up that stuck? What changed once it was in place?
If you re reading this and you have a pull request open somewhere right now, you re already doing something most people never do.
We spend a lot of time talking about scale, growth and velocity. We talk less about the quiet grind of keeping quality high while shipping continuously.
Most ideas never leave a Notion doc. Most repos never see consistent PRs. Most teams never build the habit of review, they rely on heroics instead.
At the beginning, my reason was very simple: I needed a job and I genuinely liked the product.
I graduated with a Marketing degree, but I never felt like I belonged in agencies or similar environments. It just wasn t for me. At the same time, I didn t have much experience in tech either. So I took a leap of faith and applied for a Customer Support role, almost blindly.
The early days were tough. I had no technical background, no real understanding of how apps were built, and everything felt overwhelming. But the product itself became my motivation. I started from the most basic things: learning simple technical terms, understanding how an app is structured, and slowly exploring how everything works behind the scenes.
Hey PH community! As we all rely on video calls more than ever, I'm curious about your biggest frustrations with tools like Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, Jitsi, or even the infamous Cluey. Do clunky interfaces, poor AI integrations, or a lack of admin controls (like forcing video on for interviews) drive you nuts?
I'm thinking about adding video chat to Blimp (getblimpy.cloud), our AI-native productivity suite. Imagine an AI assistant that quietly takes minutes in the background (non-intrusive), auto-generates bullet-point actions as tasks in your project hub (ditching those sloppy AI emails), plus admin perks like mandatory video, global audio muting, and background video effects that don't slow down your video.
What are your top video chat pain points? Share below your ideas could shape this!
I learned this the hard way after forgetting 90% of the words I spent months studying.
Here's the thing: your brain doesn't store information just because you've seen it. Highlighting words, writing them down once, even using them in a sentence - none of that guarantees retention.
Managing a hybrid team shouldn't require 5 different apps. You have one tool for time tracking. One for tasks. Another for chat. And zero clue how your team is actually feeling. The fragmentation is killing your productivity.
Meet Asa.Team. We've built the first "Workplace OS" that combines hard metrics (time & tasks) with soft management (wellness & culture). Everything your team needs, in one unified dashboard.