Plus: Elon's new wikipedia alternative
gm legends, happy Tuesday.
Here’s today’s lineup: VibeCode turns your app ideas into reality by letting you build straight from your phone with nothing but your voice; Alai makes slide decks painless with layouts that actually look good without you dragging boxes for hours; and Grokipedia is Elon’s spin on Wikipedia, promising “truth” through X — for better or worse.
P.S. Building something new? Tell us about it → editorial@producthunt.co 🫶
VibeCode lets you create a mobile app just by describing it. You tell it what you want, and it builds the screens, buttons, and logic right on your phone, no code, no setup, no laptop required.
🔥 Our Take: There’s something fun about skipping the whole “learn to code” guilt trip and just building. VibeCode turns ideas into apps before you’ve had time to talk yourself out of them. It’s messy, fast, and kind of exciting in a way tech hasn’t felt in a while.
FROM THE FORUMS
A thread by Alex Khoroshchak asks: when you buy tools, does “good support” actually move your wallet, or is it just nice-to-have?
Some replies say yes, they’ll stick with a tool because the support team actually shows up. Others push back: if the core product is solid, you should rarely need support.
The takeaway? Support isn’t a bullet point. It’s the safety net that keeps you from switching.
Alai is an AI presentation tool that actually understands layout. You start typing and it builds clean, responsive slides that look good without you spending half your day nudging boxes into place. It’s built for storytelling, not formatting.
🔥 Our Take: Making decks usually feels like punishment for having ideas. Alai fixes that. It gives you slides that already make sense, so you can stop obsessing over alignment and get back to the part that matters, saying something worth showing
Grokipedia is Elon Musk’s take on Wikipedia, built into X. It promises faster updates, fewer biases, and articles powered by Grok’s real-time access to the platform’s data. The goal? A living, breathing encyclopedia that never falls behind.
🔥 Our Take: Wikipedia earned its trust the hard way — years of volunteers, debates, and edits in the open. Grokipedia starts from a very different place: a platform that’s spent the last year blurring the line between opinion and fact. Maybe it’ll work. Or maybe the internet only needs one encyclopedia.
Tuesday, 28 October 2025
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