Hi Product Hunt community! I m the founder of Genius Brain Lab.
I don t just build apps; I architect scalable software pipelines. My mission is to develop a suite of 70+ innovative solutions focused on one core principle: Minimizing Human Cognitive Load.
Currently, my ecosystem includes:
Web SaaS: Our latest engine, Prompt Picker (Frame-based prompt optimization).
Mobile Apps: King of Memory (Memory training) and CityQuiz (Global trivia), both live with validated user data.
Upcoming Pipelines: AutoAppArch and makeyourtext, expanding our reach across productivity and AI utilities.
We're excited to announce a major upgrade to Layercode: support for Deepgram Flux: the world's first transcription system built specifically for voice agents.
When AI systems break, it s rarely with a crash or error log. It s a slow drift, outputs that seem fine, context that fades, retries that quietly multiply. Everything still runs, until one day it doesn t.
My friends at @ZBiotics Pre-Alcohol Probiotic are teaming up with @Sunnyside this October for the Soberish October Challenge, "a flexible way to reset on your own terms ahead of the holiday season."
Lately, I ve been reflecting on the quiet fear that, as AI tools become better at creating art, writing, and design, creativity itself might lose its meaning.
It feels like a valid concern because:
AI can produce beautiful art and music faster than a human ever could,
Many creative fields are shifting from original creation to "curating" or "editing" AI outputs,
Instant generation often replaces slow, imperfect human exploration,
Younger generations are growing up with AI co-creation as the norm, not the exception.
I wonder: Will true creativity still matter when "good enough" is instantly available?