AI in your closet

Plus, five AI tools you may have missed

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

Editing on steroids

TOP LAUNCHES

  • Aleph plugs into your edit suite. Tell it to remove a stray mic boom, relight a scene to dusk, spin up a new camera angle or stretch a shot, all from simple text prompts. Early access is live now.

  • CopyCat is a no-code browser automation tool. You link steps like go here, click that, fill this field, then drop in AI prompts for the messy bits like logins or data grabs. Run your flows in the cloud and forget the macros

  • Ash walks you through quick check‑ins and guided journaling in your browser or phone. You log your mood, answer reflection prompts and work through bite‑size CBT exercises whenever you need.

  • Norton Neo is a standalone browser that blocks phishing and malware, strips out ads, groups tabs intelligently and adds a search‑style assistant, all without extra extensions or setup.

  • Norton Neo is a standalone browser that blocks phishing and malware, strips out ads, groups tabs intelligently and adds a search‑style assistant, all without extra extensions or setup.

WHAT’S HOT

Fully digitized wardrobe

Google is about to start dreaming up outfits (and furniture, and who knows what else) that don’t even exist yet. Later this year in the US, you’ll be able to type something wild like “rust‑red leather trench coat with neon trim,” and AI Mode will spit back a slick, made‑up mockup that matches your words. It’s purely synthetic: there’s no factory churning out those exact pieces, just pixels pretending to be products.

Behind the scenes, Google’s also rolling out an AI‑powered virtual try‑on across Search, Shopping and Images. Find a jacket you like, tap “try it on,” upload a full‑body selfie, and watch it get draped over your own silhouette in real time. No awkward guesswork about sleeve length or waist fit—just a quick snapshot that tells you “yeah, that works.”

It’s part inspiration tool, part fitting room hack. You get to sketch out your style in plain English, then see it on yourself before you even click through to real listings. But remember: those first images are fantasy. You might fall in love with a dress that, spoiler, you can’t actually buy, at least not until someone makes it. And handing over your full‑body photo? That’s the privacy trade‑off you’ll have to weigh before you jump in.

TRENDING DISCUSSIONS

Battle of the Voice Apps

  • Alex prefers Wispr Flow’s riff‑and‑respond style that handles multiple languages

  • Kim tried both and picked Aqua for its privacy focus but admits the UI feels rough

  • Jordan splits the difference: Aqua for quick notes and Wispr for drafting long emails

  • A few warn Wispr’s tiered fees jump sharply once you start using it nonstop

So where do your words land, pure speed, conversational flow or a mash‑up of both?

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