| 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. . | | TOP LAUNCHES | Create your own world | | TOP LAUNCHES | EX-4D takes any ordinary video clip and carves out its hidden 3D geometry and motion over time. Upload a clip, let it reconstruct depth, mesh and textures, then pan around, zoom in or shift your perspective as if you shot it in VR. | VISEAL turns photos into everyday language chats using agentic AI. Snap a scene and get back-and-forth dialogues that spring from your world. Learn words you actually need, not textbook scraps. | Phase hooks into Figma and turns your designs into fully interactive prototypes with real code export. Build complex user flows, simultaneous interactions and export React components without wrestling plugins. | Browse Anything adds a chat bar to any webpage so you can type βsummarize thisβ, βfind all email linksβ or βcompare those pricesβ and get instant answers without endless scrolling or copy-pasting. | Lazy 2.0 gives you one keystroke to grab context from any window, email, PDF, tweet or video, and drop it into a live chat where you can riff on your own notes without ever leaving flow. |
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| | WHATβS HOT | No more free for all | | The shift: Cloudflare just flipped the script on AI scrapers. With its new Pay-per-Crawl feature, websites can now charge bots to access their content. No payment, no page. | The play: It's a direct shot at the βfree-for-allβ era of web scraping. Your site, your rules. AI companies that once hoovered up data without blinking now have to ask nicelyβand open their wallets. | Why it matters: This turns AI models from silent lurkers into paying customers. If it catches on, the internet becomes less of a buffet and more of a cover charge. | The snag: It only works if the biggest bots actually comply. And letβs be honest, the same folks who "accidentally" scraped private medical data arenβt exactly known for playing fair. |
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| | TRENDING DISCUSSIONS | | | Gabe Perez dropped a hands-on review of Fieldy, the wearable βIRL Granolaβ that aims to rescue scattered ADHD brains from forgotten to-dos and living-room chaos. He strapped it on under his shirt for a week, using its always-on voice capture, Google Calendar sync and Apple Watch reminders to turn conversations into task lists and day highlights. | Pros include spotless reminders, three-day battery life, slick app design and seamless Google integration. Cons crop up in the form factorβplastic shell, visible status light under thin shirtsβand glitches in voice context (it sometimes picks up bystanders or canβt handle multilingual chats). | So hereβs the real test: would you welcome a buzz-and-blink sidekick around your neck, or stick to good old apps and let your brain do the heavy lifting? | |
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