p/vibecoding
by
Kashyap Rathod
AI dev tools are moving stupid fast. Every few weeks, there s a new must-use. Some stick. Most don t.
Some vibe coders are developing full products with @ChatGPT by OpenAI+ @Replit. Others swear by @Cursor + @Claude by Anthropic . A few are mixing @Lovable , @v0 by Vercel , and @bolt.new . New and shipping way faster than expected.
I ve been refining my own vibe stack lately.Building with @Google Antigravity at the core. It keeps the flow clean when things get messy.
Share your current Vibe Stack:
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p/supabase
Anup Vasudev
Thanks to supabase I was able to get my project up and running in record time. I use oauth, edge functions, storage, database ofcourse, queues:pgmq and pgvector.
Please check out the project at https://github.com/vpuna/vpuna-a...
It's a semantic search platform for structured and unstructured data , with MCP support and more
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mina
AI dev tools are evolving crazy fast , every few weeks there s a new must-try for vibe coders.
Some people are building full products with @ChatGPT by OpenAI and @Replit , others swear by @Cursor and @Claude by Anthropic , and a few are mixing @Lovable + @v0 by Vercel + @bolt.new to ship apps in record time.
I ve been refining my own vibe stack lately, trying to find that sweet spot between speed, control, and creativity.It made me wonder ,what does your setup look like right now?
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p/intrascope-app
Vladimir
Hey everyone,
After launching Intrascope and finishing Top 10 Product of the Day, we wanted to open a quick discussion.
The biggest takeaway for us wasn t the ranking, but the conversations. We talked to teams who are already using AI daily and are struggling with scattered tools, separate API keys, lost context, and costs growing without visibility.
That s exactly why we built Intrascope: a shared AI workspace where teams bring their own API keys, work with shared context and Manifests, and keep usage and costs predictable.
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p/openai
steve beyatte
On their livestream today, OpenAI just released a bunch of new tools for reliably building and using AI agents. From what I can tell, this is what's new-
New APIs:
Responses API - a new multi-modal API that builds on chat completions to allow for the next-generation of tool calling, starting with the new tools announced today.
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33
p/graphbit
Musa Molla
Hey Product Hunt, Musa here.
We re entering a new era not just of models, but of agents.
But there s a missing piece nobody talks about: the infrastructure layer that keeps them alive, efficient, and accountable.
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p/general
Rajiv Ayyangar
I was recently talking with a group of founders, and we went around sharing tools we're using now. Posting my notes for our community here - would love to know what else people are using!
Voice AI toolkit:
- Vapi
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fmerian
Supabase recently surveyed over 2,000 startup founders and builders to uncover what's powering modern startups: tech stacks, GTM, and approach to AI.
See full report here
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Marija Popovic
Hi all! I m working on an idea that came out of my own frustration:
There are SO many AI tools right now for writing, meetings, code, design, finance but it s getting overwhelming.
Even though I m deep in the AI world, I still find myself Googling things like: Best AI tools for solo founders ; Free AI video editing apps ; Is this tool even legit?
So here s the vision:
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Aaron O'Leary
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61
Sean Howell
I spend a lot more time on PH at the moment to see what indepedent makers are spending their time on. I've noticed some patterns and also want to share a little bit about my journey at South Park Commons. Most startup stories begin at zero when there s already a team, an idea, maybe even a prototype. But at South Park Commons (SPC), the philosophy is different: people gather in the -1 to 0 stage. That liminal space where you don t yet know what you re building or even if you should build at all. It s a place for exploration, experimentation, and being brutally honest about what s working and what s not.
A hallmark of SPC is how often industry leaders drop by to share what they ve learned in the wild. Recently, I was in a small chat with Tyler Payne former Google and LinkedIn AI lead, startup builder, who has spent the last decade helping teams actually ship real-world ML systems. We're always talking about what's being launched at SPC.
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30
KP
14
p/tile-2
Saif Sadiq
What is Tile?
Tile is an AI-powered platform to build and ship production-grade native mobile apps - without needing a full-stack dev team.
If you've ever used an AI coding tool and thought,
"This login screen built itself!"
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p/v0
To celebrate the launch of v0.app on Product Hunt, @v0 is launching "Free0."
v0 is FREE this week for the first 100K users per day. No throttling. The best model by default.
Join the launch on Product Hunt and try v0.app for free
Daniel Zaitzow
We're having some internal discussions about what users would prefer - a wide range of niche products (maybe in more of an app-like ecosystem) - or an all in one platform. Interested in learning what the community things - primarily folks who use creator tools and publish / sell / create content!
p/fine
Dan Leshem
Recently I've worked with a group of non-corders trying to "vibe code" their apps with AI. While knowing code is clearly not a must these days, it helps to get technical.People who were familiar with basic software engineering concepts were 10x more likely to success and get better results.So, with the hope of providing value to the non-coders people, I've created a quick roadmap for the basic terms and concepts you should be familiar with.
Requirements: Building apps with AI is all about being able to clearly guide AI and express your app features and requirements. You need to be able to express those ideas and explain them as you d explain to a human developer. Think like a Technical Product Manager.
Frontend: The face of your app. It's what your users see and interact with. It could be a website, a mobile app, or a desktop app. Most popular frontend libraries and frameworks are React, Next.js.
UIs: They are the buttons, the forms, the modals, the tooltips, etc. In React, the UI is built with components. For design & styling, Tailwind CSS is the most popular library. For animations, Framer Motion is the most popular library.
Packages & npm: Apps are not built from scratch.They are built on top of existing libraries and frameworks, like lego blocks.
The most popular package manager is npm. For example, "react-hook-form" is a famous package that helps you build forms.
Backend: The backend is the part of your app that runs on the server.
It's where you store your data, your business logic.
e.g: If you want to send an email, or process payments - this is where you'll do it.
Vibe tip: Use minimal backends with serverless functions.
Database: The database is where you store your data.
It's where you store your users, your projects, your tasks, etc. Think of it as a big spreadsheet.
I recommend using a database that is integrated with your frontend.
For example: Fine, or Supabase.
API: Real-life apps almost always need to integrate with other apps.
For example: if you want to send email, or get weather data, or integrate with AI - it's all done through APIs.
Hosting & Deployment: For your app to be accessible to the public, you need to host it.
The code is usually hosted on GitHub, and deployed to platforms like Fine, Vercel, Netlify.
Finally, being comfortable with code is helpful - even if not a must.
AI often makes minor mistakes (like importing a wrong package), and if you re not afraid of reviewing code - you will get better results faster.
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Manas Sharma
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52
p/upsolve-ai
Ka Ling Wu
4
silencer.xyz
Henry Walker
3
Plan > Prototype > Production > Publish
Hey PH!
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