| WELCOME | Happy Tuesday, legends. Welcome back to another edition of The Frontier β our weekly newsletter covering the best new AI launches on Product Hunt. This week, Anthropicβs newest launch, a tool to finally hit inbox zero, and a breakdown of the Jony Ive X OpenAI marriage | | TOP LAUNCHES | Anthropicβs biggest update yet | | TOP LAUNCHES | Claude 4 gulps a million tokens at once, flips between text, code, and images, and keeps its place for marathon threads. Drop your entire spec, a stack of PDFs, or a full repo and keep the convo moving without slicing info into snack-sized chunks. | Super connects to Drive, Slack, Notion, Jiraβwherever the team stashes stuffβindexes the whole mess, and gives you a single command bar. Ask a question, it surfaces the doc or thread with just enough context so you can jump in and move on. | Googleβs latest NotebookLM lets you dump PDFs, Drive files, or interview transcripts into one spot and ask questions like youβre texting a research assistant. It cites every answer, spins summaries, and can draft outlines without touching your original docs. | Aidy lives in the menu bar and spits out first-pass slides, code snippets, diagrams, banners, invoices, and mind maps. Pick the job, pick a model, hit β-Return, and the draft lands in its own windowβready for edits, not buried in a browser tab. | Zero is an AI-native email client that plugs into Gmail or Outlook, slurps your backlog, and starts classifying on impact. Real mail lands in Focus, newsletters drop into Later, cold spam goes straight to Done. It drafts replies in your voice, surfaces tasks, and keeps a running tally so the badge never creeps past single digits. |
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| | TRENDING DISCUSSIONS | OpenAI is serious about hardware | | OpenAI just bought itself a bodyβand hired the guy who dressed the iPhone to give it a soul. | A $6.5 billion all-stock deal folds Jony Iveβs 55-person hardware studio io into a new βio divisionβ inside OpenAI. Ive stays an independent artisan at his firm LoveFrom, but gets the keys to every future OpenAI product, physical and digital. | Ive and Sam Altman have been sketching βbeyond-the-smartphoneβ gizmos since 2023; think pocket-sized, screen-free companions that whisper ChatGPT in your ear rather than another glass rectangle. First reveal is penciled in for 2026. | Why pay iPhone money for a year-old startup? Owning hardware lets OpenAI skip the Apple/Google tollbooths and plant generative AI directly on your wrist, lapel, or dashboardβbefore Meta or Humane nail the form factor. | Big swing, bigger risk: recent AI gadgets (Humane Pin, Rabbit R1) bombed on heat, battery, and βwhy bother?β questions. Iveβs task is to make the inevitable feel inevitable againβand to keep that $300 billion OpenAI valuation looking cheap. | Bottom line: OpenAI now has the brains and the tailor. If Ive can stitch ChatGPT into something youβll actually carry, the next interface war just left the browserβand walked onto your body. |
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| TRENDING DISCUSSIONS | Blast from the past | | Gabe Perez tossed out a design throwback: βShould AI hardware dress in early-2000s translucent plastics and wild colors again?β | Replies broke into three vibes: | Retro lovers want chunky GameBoy shells and see-through gadgets for that βI can see the soul of the machineβ thrill. Modern minimalists argue sleek matte finishes and clean lines keep the focus on function, not flair. Hybrid hopefuls dream of mixing todayβs performance with a splash of β00s personalityβthink modular, repairable devices with a wink of color.
| Feels like the sweet spot is somewhere between βretro raveβ and βstealth mode.β Worth a scroll if matte-black boredom has you yearning for a little plastic pop. | |
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