| 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 | Claude does everything | | Cowork is Anthropic’s new desktop agent inside the Claude macOS app. You point it at a folder, and it can sort and rename your downloads, pull data out of screenshots, spin up spreadsheets and docs from notes, and even handle web chores through a Chrome connector when it needs a browser. Hivinq is a copilot for customer support that lives inside Slack. It reads the thread, uses your product knowledge to draft a reply, and lets the human on the ticket edit or approve before anything reaches the customer. When you correct it, it watches the conversation and adjusts, so answers get sharper over time instead of repeating the same mistakes. Cubic 2.0 is an AI code reviewer that runs directly in GitHub and gives instant, context aware feedback on pull requests. It aims for high signal and low noise, with incremental checks on every push, auto updated PR descriptions, synced docs, and a CLI so you can run the same review before you even push. Repo Prompt scans your codebase and builds focused context windows for your AI coding tools. It picks out the files and symbols that actually matter for the task, then sends a tight summary to the model instead of a random pile of snippets. It works with the subs you already pay for and can run as an MCP server so editors like Claude Code, Cursor or Codex can plug into it Capacity is an AI app builder that slows you down just enough to keep things sane. Instead of jumping straight into code, it walks you through a proper spec, asks the annoying but necessary questions, then uses that plan to generate a fullstack app that actually lines up with what you had in mind.
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| | WHAT’S HOT | Siri might finally be useful | | Apple, the company that’s spent the last year framing AI as something it would do carefully and mostly on its own, is now teaming up with Google to make Siri smarter. | Apple and Google just signed a multi-year deal that puts Google’s Gemini models and cloud infrastructure behind Apple’s next wave of AI features, including the long-promised Siri overhaul coming later in 2026. Internally, Apple landed on Gemini as the strongest foundation after evaluating multiple options. | Apple insists this doesn’t change its stance on privacy. Siri and Apple Intelligence will still lean on on-device processing and Apple’s Private Cloud Compute, with ChatGPT sticking around as an optional fallback for harder questions. | The market reaction was immediate. Alphabet stock jumped, briefly pushing Google’s parent toward a $4 trillion valuation, while Apple quietly signaled that the race to ship capable assistants matters more than who builds the model. | The bigger question: if Siri finally works the way people expect, does it matter whose brain is under the hood? Or is this just what the assistant era looks like now? | |
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