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gm legends, happy Wednesday.
Here's today's lineup: a one‑click booking page that turns your link into a branded mini‑site; an in‑app helper that reads your screen and drafts replies without copy‑pasting; and a doc‑to‑website magic wand that launches live sites from any file.
P.S. Launching soon? We'd love to hear about it → editorial@producthunt.co 🫶
Faces turns any Google Doc, Slide, PDF or Markdown file into a live website with a single click. Paste your link, pick a look and send your page out into the wild.
🔥 Our Take: Turning every random PDF into its own mini‑site is a rush and a half. It's clever until your team floods you with "make me one too" requests, but damn if that instant glow‑up doesn't make you look like a wizard. Just don't blame me when your doc kingdom spirals out of control.
Bookva spins up a custom booking page in one click. Pick video or image backgrounds, hook up all your Google calendars at once and let AI set your availability and durations without any fiddling.
🔥 Our Take: It's wild how much clout a killer background gives you. Sure, if you go full Hollywood on the visuals you risk distracting from the actual meeting, but the instant polish and zero setup pain is a thrill you won't get from bland tools. I mean, why shouldn't your booking system look good?
You dive into research. You scour papers and data. You build slides and charts. You lose hours on endless formatting and fact-checking sources.
Enter Skywork AI →
Web Companion by Super slips AI help into any web tool you use like CRMs, wikis, helpdesks or intranet. It reads your screen, taps into your docs and drafts replies, summaries or custom actions without making you copy and paste.
🔥 Our Take: This is the co‑worker who actually knows where everything lives. You highlight a ticket, ask a question and get back a ready‑to‑send reply in seconds. It misses odd edge cases but the hours you reclaim make it worth a quick double‑check.
Brandon is staring down the "one more tweak" trap as he preps his first launch and wonders when to just ship.
The community chipped in with battle tactics: stage your release with a soft launch to get early feedback before going public, lean on gut checks against your original plan to spot endless tweak loops, and remember that real user insights only land once you hit "go." Bug fixes and UX kinks get priority, new features can wait, and your marketing assets deserve as much love as your code.
So here's the kicker: how do you draw your own line between "good enough" and "never shipping at all"?
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AWK KHAN









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