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gm and welcome back to the Leaderboard. Today, we're looking at a publishing tool for voice memos, an AI-powered app to smash your goals, and Google's latest tool that makes developer's lives easier.
P.S. Want your launch to be featured in this newsletter? Drop us a line with your pitch at editorial@producthunt.co 🫶
Voicenotes Pages turns your spoken thoughts into public posts. Just record, hit publish, and get a page with audio, transcript, and a link people can share or subscribe to. It's like a podcast, but with lower stakes and simpler tools.
🔥 Our take: Most platforms want polish. This leans into momentum. It's built for people who move fast, think out loud, and don't want their ideas to die in a Notes app. You're not building a brand. You're sharing a thought before it disappears.
Clay uses AI to turn any personal goal into a flexible, trackable plan. It combines daily planning, gamified motivation, and performance views to help you stay consistent without burning out.
🔥 Our take:
There are two kinds of goal apps: ones that make you feel bad for missing a day, and ones that pretend you didn't. Clay takes a different route. It tracks what's actually happening, surfaces it clearly, and lets you adjust without judgment. That alone puts it ahead of most tools built to "keep you accountable."
Firebase Studio is a full-stack development environment you run entirely in the browser. It comes loaded with Gemini AI, full app previews, and cloud emulators. No local setup. No waiting for builds. Nothing to install.
🔥 Our take: Setting up a dev environment is still one of the most annoying parts of building. Firebase Studio nukes that first hour of "why isn't this working" and replaces it with a tab that's ready to go. The code editor, the emulator, the AI—it's all just there.
Bucket just dropped something wild: you can now add feature flags from inside your AI coding assistant. Whether you're using Cursor, Augment, or Windsurf, you can just tell it what you want flagged, and the MCP server handles it.
So instead of context-switching to write config files or CLI commands, you just prompt: "flag the download button." That's it.
Curious how people are using this in the wild, or if it's too much trust to hand over? Anyone already trying it?
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