Plus: Is Adobe too late to the party?
gm legends, happy Thursday.
Hereβs todayβs lineup: Cursor 2.0 drops its first in-house model made specifically for coding β faster, smarter, and built to handle real projects; Airtop Agents turns the web into your personal workforce, spinning up agents that do your grunt work for you; and Gammacode keeps your repos safe with AI that hunts and fixes vulnerabilities before they hit prod.
P.S. Building something new? Tell us about it β editorial@producthunt.co π«Ά
Cursor 2.0 just dropped with its first in-house model built specifically for coding. Itβs faster, tuned for real projects, and ditches the middleman by running on their own infrastructure. Theyβve also reworked memory, context handling, and editor integration so it actually keeps up when your codebase isnβt tiny.
π₯ Our Take: Everyoneβs been slapping GPTs onto editors, but Cursor just made its own brain. Thatβs a flex and a warning shot. When the most popular AI IDE starts training models for itself, itβs not chasing the pack anymore. It is the pack.
TRENDING IN THE FORUMS
Adobeβs new tool for editing YouTube Shorts has sparked a split reaction. Some users see it as a classic Adobe moveβsolid tech stepping into a trend too late. Others view it as a smart pivot to stay relevant. Many pointed out that creators left for fast, lean tools like CapCut long ago, and now Adobe is trying to follow the pack.
How you take it probably reflects whether you value legacy or agility: do you stick with the tools you trust, or embrace the new ones already built for the now?
Airtop Agents lets you spin up AI workers in your browser using plain English. Ask them to log in somewhere, scrape data, connect tools, or run workflows β no code, no setup, no stress. Each one runs in the cloud, quietly doing the stuff you donβt want to.
π₯ Our Take: The idea of telling your browser what to do and watching it actually obey feels surreal. We used to call that wishful thinking β now itβs just Tuesday.
Gammacode brings web and terminal agents into your dev workflow that donβt just point out bugs, they fix them. These agents scan repos for vulnerabilities, auto-refactor, and push fixes via GitHub Actions. No indexing your code. Zero-knowledge architecture. Your machine, your rules.
π₯ Our Take: Finding one bug is annoying. Walking into a production blast zone because nobody cleaned up eight hidden ones? Thatβs what this is stopping. The code keeps moving. The panic button doesnβt get hit.
Thursday, 30 October 2025
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