January 19th, 2026
r/place but for music
This newsletter was brought to you byWispr FlowThe internet got a lot more musical
gm legends, happy Monday.
Today’s lineup: a collaborative map tool that lets groups drop pins, notes, and context together without turning it into a GIS project, a strange and delightful site where the internet itself generates endless ambient music, and a research-first feed that replaces hot takes with actual papers so your scrolling at least does something for your brain.
Maps for people who hate logins

Tofu Maps lets you spin up simple personal maps, drop pins for the places you care about, and share them with a single link, no signup. Use it for travel ideas, city guides, filming spots, or just a running list of places you keep meaning to check out, without getting sucked into a full blown mapping tool.
🔥 Our Take: Saving locations across screenshots, notes and random chats is chaos. This is way calmer: make a map in a minute, shove pins where they belong, send the link, move on. Great for trips, city recs, or finally getting all your go to spots out of your head and into something your friends can actually use.
Reverse-engineer Cursor's launches

Cursor launched five times on Product Hunt in 2025, hitting the top-5 for the day each time. While it certainly helps that Cursor is a beloved product, we’ve got a lot of those on Product Hunt. How exactly does Cursor do it?
Fmerian investigated and found five factors behind their successful launches. Now, we’re not guaranteeing that you’ll shoot to the top of the rankings, but we do think it’s worth studying success.
One mic for every app

Typing is overrated.
Wispr Flow lets you write everywhere just by speaking — email, Slack, Notion, ChatGPT, even your IDE. No app-hopping. No copy-paste gymnastics. Just talk.
Flow edits as you speak, transforming your words into polished writing in real time. The result? Clean, sendable text at up to 4× the speed of typing.
It’s not another writing app. It’s a layer that quietly makes everything you do faster.
Live on Mac, Windows, and iPhone. Android coming soon. 🎙️💨
Sound canvas for everyone

Internet Makes Music is a public music experiment where the whole internet shares one sound grid. Each pixel you place triggers a note, and together it turns into a looping track people build live from all over the world. No ads, no logins, just a browser, a canvas, and a bunch of strangers composing in pixels.
🔥 Our Take: This is pure early-web chaos in the best way. It feels like r/place for music, built on a pack-of-chips budget just because it sounded fun. No tokens, no leaderboard grind, no AI copilot, just click, listen, nudge the loop, and see what the rest of the planet does with it.
Turn doomscrolling into research

Soch turns your scrolling time into a feed of real research instead of random takes. It uses AI to surface papers, break them into clear summaries, add simple visuals, and organize everything into topics you actually care about, so learning feels like a familiar feed, not homework.
🔥 Our Take: Nobody is dropping Instagram overnight, but swapping a few mindless scrolls for ideas from people who spend years on a problem is a pretty solid trade. This meets you in the same thumb-flick habit and quietly upgrades what you’re putting in your head.
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Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterday’s top ten launches. That’s it.
