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Manus AI now integrates with Mobbin, allowing users to automate design research across top products.
The author shares the process of using AI tools (Claude, Codex, etc.) to build a landing page with a tech and ocean-floor aesthetic for the Lody AI product, emphasizing the development philosophy of humans controlling the lower limit and AI expanding the upper limit.
Boris Cherny reflects on the convergence of engineering, product, design, and data science roles, proposing five archetypes (Prototyper, Builder, Sweeper, Grower, Maintainer) observed in the Claude Code team and discussing team composition based on product maturity.
Rhys Sullivan argues that companies should make their APIs, skills, and knowledge accessible to users' own AI agents rather than forcing everyone to use in-app agents, enabling power users to leverage their preferred models and local context while still offering simple interfaces for regular users.
The article argues that access rules for frontier AI models are becoming a key part of the product experience, affecting eligibility, preview status, and fallback options, and that serious AI work requires predictable access rules.
Codex can now be used directly for developing iOS apps, integrating product design, built-in browser prototyping, and simulator preview without needing to open Xcode.
A statement arguing that the approval user experience, not the MCP or connectors themselves, constitutes the real product.
The author argues that successful AI agent products require a robust permission system with read-only, draft, approval, limited execution, and audit layers, prioritizing safety over apparent magic.
A tech user complains about the prevalence of surveys immediately after deciding to try a product, questioning why this UX design is so common.
Introducing Codex's product-design plugin, an AI design assistant that helps designers and product managers quickly convert requirements into working prototypes. It supports multi-directional exploration, Figma collaboration, and prototype publishing, accelerating the early stages of product design.
The article discusses Snap's new Specs AR glasses, praising their advanced technology but criticizing their unwieldy design and comfort issues, questioning whether anyone will want to wear them.
A tweet criticizes Snap CEO Evan Spiegel's new Specs AR glasses, calling the design horrendous and predicting nobody will wear them.
MKBHD comments on the need for a term describing how useful a product must be to overcome its goofy appearance, reacting to a demo of Snap's new AR glasses.
Paul Buchheit argues that great products succeed by focusing on a few core attributes executed well, rather than trying to include every feature. He uses the examples of the iPod, iPad, and Gmail to illustrate his point.
Upcoming Section 230-related trials for social media platforms are scheduled for mid-2026, focusing on product design theories that could bypass Section 230 immunity and increase litigation risk for Meta, YouTube, TikTok, and Snap.
As AI models are retired, products should provide comprehensive migration surfaces including affected workflows, replacement models, behavior differences, and testing capabilities, rather than just sunset dates.
The article questions whether AI products over-rely on chat history for personalization, noting its noisiness and suggesting that summaries, tags, and preference fields have shortcomings. It seeks alternative sources of truth for context without becoming intrusive.
Hyperframes has already implemented the local-first and CLI-first product form, combining with Claude Code for LUI interaction, and launching a UI for preview and necessary GUI interaction.
This is a summary of experience from the first anniversary of a website's overseas expansion, covering practical tips and tool recommendations in areas such as demand mining, SEO, development, data analysis, payment, traffic, backlinks, advertising, and more.
A user recounts forming a deep emotional bond with a companion AI that used memory and personalization, only to have its personality erased by an update. This highlights the ethical failure of designing systems to exploit emotional investment without ensuring continuity.