Catch your agents lying
gm legends, happy Tuesday.
Today’s lineup: a CLI tool that stress tests your AI agents from the terminal instead of hiding behind a pretty dashboard, a pitch helper that lets your deck warm up investors before you ever get on a call, and a little AI wrapper that turns your product into something people can actually use inside ChatGPT instead of hoping they stumble onto your site.
Catch quiet agent failures

Rippletide Eval CLI is a terminal tool for beating on your AI agents until you actually trust them. It hits your agent endpoints from the CLI, auto generates questions from their own knowledge, lets you plug in fixed test sets, and spits out clear hallucination KPIs with real-time progress and detailed reports.
🔥 Our Take: Hooking an agent into a real workflow without proper eval is basically vibes-driven engineering. This gives you a way to sit in the terminal, hammer an endpoint, and see exactly where it hallucinates instead of squinting at vague metrics in some heavy dashboard. If you ship agents, this is the grown up preflight check you keep pretending you will build yourself.
Curious Kitty is, in fact, ours

You might have spotted a new account called Curious Kitty popping up on Product Hunt over the last week and wondered what the hell it is. Rohan dug into it in a thread, and the PH team confirmed it’s an official experiment: a small AI sidekick whose whole job is to ask clarifying questions and pull more detail out of launches. No leaderboard impact, no secret scoring, just extra context that later feeds into things like better alternatives and Orbit Award decisions.
Nika raised the obvious concern about bots crowding out real people, and Kitty basically said “humans first, cat second” in response. The vibe right now is: keep humans as the main event, use Curious Kitty as a prompt to tell a clearer story about what you’re building, who it’s for, and why it’s different.
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. 🎙️💨
Warm up investors first

InteractPitch turns your pitch deck into an interactive, async walkthrough. You send it ahead of the call, investors explore it with an AI version of you stepping in to explain slides and answer questions, and you get live insight into who opened it, where they lingered, and which sections raised questions so you can walk into the first call already calibrated.
🔥 Our Take: Founders usually fire off a deck and then sit in inbox limbo, guessing what actually landed. Letting investors poke around first while you quietly see what they cared about means the “first” meeting is closer to a second one, and you can skip half the small talk slides.
Noodle Seed, but in chat

Noodle Seed lets you turn your product into a proper app inside AI chats. You plug in your site, docs, offers, and tools like Shopify or HubSpot, and it packages that into something people can browse and use directly in ChatGPT, with more AI stores on the way. Instead of hoping they click your link in search, you show up where they’re already asking “what should I use for this?”
🔥 Our Take: Everyone’s busy arguing about AI SEO while customers are literally asking chatbots what to buy. This leans into that reality. If you believe even a chunk of your future traffic will come from “I asked ChatGPT,” having a real presence there feels less like a hack and more like basic distribution hygiene.
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