| WELCOME | Happy Tuesday, legends. Welcome back to another edition of The Frontier — our weekly newsletter covering the best new AI launches on Product Hunt. . | | TOP LAUNCHES | Agents for everyone | | Google Workspace Studio lets anyone in a Workspace org spin up AI agents that handle the boring parts of work across Gmail, Drive, Chat, Calendar and more. You describe the workflow, drag a few steps together, plug in tools like Asana, Jira or Salesforce, and let Gemini 3 run the approvals, triage, summaries, and updates in the background, no code needed. Documentation AI helps teams write and maintain product docs without turning it into a side job. You get a clean docs site out of the box, an AI helper that drafts and updates pages using real product context, and an embedded assistant so users can ask questions and get answers straight from your documentation instead of pinging support. Kalycs keeps your Mac from turning into a dumping ground. It indexes your local files, lets you search and ask questions in plain language, and auto-organizes your Downloads using rules or AI suggestions. Everything stays on-device, with AI features running through your own OpenAI key instead of a random cloud. Compass is a Slack app that lets your team ask data questions in plain language and get charts or tables back from your warehouse or from built-in prospecting data. It connects to warehouses like Snowflake, BigQuery, Redshift, Athena and more, while keeping governance and definitions under version control so data teams stay in charge. Moodify listens to you talk about your day, then builds a playlist that matches your mood, energy, and what you’re doing, using your Spotify or Apple Music library. Instead of picking from a hundred “focus” or “chill” mixes, you just say where your head’s at and let it sort the tempo, genre, and vibe for you.
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| | WHAT’S HOT | A magic box beats iPad time | | Gabe wrote a long, very dad-core review of Stickerbox, the little red “magic box” his 5-year-old now races through her morning routine to earn time with. He walks through how it feels more like a real toy than an AI gadget: fast, reliable prints, a big friendly button, simple “hold, talk, get a sticker” flow, and safety filters that hold up even under weird prompts. | Most of the post is really about what it does for his kid though: creativity, language practice (they’re using it for English in Japan), patience, and all the coloring and sticker-peeling fine motor stuff, which is why he ends up calling it one of the rare tech toys that actually earns a permanent spot in their quiet-time kit. |
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| FROM THE FORUMS | Humans, not just agents, are changing | | Musa started a thread arguing that the real shift in AI isn’t just better models or faster agents, it’s how teams are quietly rewriting their workflows around them. Instead of bolting AI onto old processes, people are deleting steps, tightening objectives, and reorganizing work around what agents can now handle natively. | He’s asking builders to share one concrete example: a workflow they rebuilt because AI made the old version pointless. Less “we added a bot to Slack,” more “we stopped doing this step at all because the system can now own it.” If you’ve redesigned how you work instead of just sprinkling AI on top, this is the place to unpack it. | |
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