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The Leaderboard

Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterday’s top ten launches. That’s it.

January 13th, 2026Claude, now on your Mac

gm legends, happy Tuesday.

Today’s roundup: a desktop agent that has moved past code and now files, renames and clicks through your Mac for you, a support helper that drafts clear replies inside Slack so your team is not rewriting the same answer ten times a day, and an iPhone keyboard that turns your favorite AI moves and text snippets into one tap while you type.

January 12th, 2026MTV, back in a browser

gm legends, happy Monday.

MTV REWIND brings back that old-school music video channel energy in a single tab, Atlas.new turns your spreadsheets into maps people can actually click around, and Cubic 2.0 gives your pull requests an AI reviewer that focuses on the real problems instead of filling your diff with noise.

January 9th, 2026Journal from your inbox

gm legends, happy Friday.

Today’s roundup: an email journaling tool that just pings your inbox so you can reply and call it a diary, a repo sidekick that feeds your AI coding tools the right slice of your code instead of random files, and a Mac terminal that keeps the shell but finally makes the window around it feel like an upgrade instead of a punishment.

January 8th, 2026Ask first, build later

gm legends, happy Thursday.

Here’s today’s roundup: a spec-first AI app builder that makes you define what you’re actually shipping before it generates the Next.js and Tailwind for you, a keyboard-driven Mac browser that treats shortcuts and focus like core features instead of decoration, and a shared AI workspace that pulls all your model keys, usage, and team chats into one place so your AI stack finally feels like one tool instead of five tabs.

January 7th, 2026Bricks, bots, and useless buttons

gm legends, happy Wednesday.

Today’s roundup: LEGO’s new smart brick makes builds light up and react when kids twist and swoosh them around, AgentNotch turns your MacBook notch into a tiny HUD so you can see what your AI agents are actually doing, and Too Many Buttons is a gloriously pointless little browser game that feels like peak old internet energy where you just click stuff to see what breaks.

January 6th, 2026Clean up your agent mess

gm legends, happy Tuesday.

Today’s lineup: one tool that cleans up the messy glue layer behind all your AI agents so you stop rebuilding routing and guardrails in every repo, one that turns the songs you already have on repeat into actual language practice, and one that lets you mark “this looks wrong” in a product and turn it into a proper design bug in a couple of clicks.

January 5th, 2026Steal some designs

gm legends, happy Monday.

Today’s lineup: a Chrome helper that lets you swipe the best bits of any site’s design without living in DevTools, a visibility tool that tells you how AI models actually talk about your brand, and a new-tab dashboard that turns that empty screen you open 100 times a day into a calm little control panel you actually use.

January 2nd, 2026Shipping some love

gm legends, happy Friday. 

Here’s today’s roundup: a dating app that lives inside your editor so you can match between commits, a radial menu that turns your shortcuts into a quick flick instead of a keyboard yoga session, and a Slack helper that trims your essay-length drafts into sharp messages people will actually read.

January 1st, 2026Start the year with purpose

gm legends, happy first day of 2026.

If you want to kick this year off with more than vibes, today’s lineup has range: one tool forces you to look at your life in big blocks so those “someday” plans actually find a slot, one cuts your feeds down to the tiny slice of the internet that is worth your attention, and one tracks your caffeine curve so the new sleep and health routines have a fighting chance.

December 31st, 2025Read from the notch

gm legends, happy New Year’s Eve! 

Notchie turns your MacBook notch into a tiny teleprompter so you can fake “off the cuff” one last time this year, Foundire stops you from running the same first-round interviews on repeat and Trip Replay turns your travel chaos into clean little map videos that actually deserve a spot on your camera roll.