- The Frontier by Product Hunt
- Posts
- AI wants your eyes
AI wants your eyes
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. This week, Meta’s new AI glasses, an AI that handles all the tedious tasks for you, and there’s trouble in the OpenAI x Jony Ive bromance.
TOP LAUNCHES
Eyes of the future
TOP LAUNCHES
Oakley Meta Glasses pack hands-free video, open-ear audio, water resistance, decent battery life and camera, plus live AI feedback in a sporty frame. Slip them on and let the tech handle the extras while you stay locked on your move.
11.ai by ElevenLabs is a voice-first assistant hooking into your tools to actually handle tasks. Tell it to dig up leads, draft Slack updates, or log CRM entries, all by voice.
Pythagora 2.0 chats through your idea and turns it into a living full-stack app from planning to deployment, with built-in logs, breakpoints, database inspection and seamless hosting on your infra or the cloud.
Thunai transforms your org’s docs, chats, and tickets into self-learning assistants. Deploy agents that handle calls, emails, chats, and tasks for support, sales, or marketing, zero coding required.
Chat or call Martin on iOS or web and watch him juggle calendar invites, inbox clean-up, to-dos, reminders, and Slack pings. He even shoots texts and dials calls for you, learning your quirks over time.
WHAT’S HOT
Pocket-Sized AI Revolution
The pitch: court filings spill the beans on OpenAI’s secret Jony Ive–designed AI gadget, and it won’t be earbuds or wearables but something you stash in a pocket or place on a desk, with a launch not before 2026
The lawsuit: audio startup Iyo sued over trademark and alleged copying of its “audio computer,” forcing OpenAI to halt marketing and scrub mentions after a judge greenlit an October hearing
Why it matters: we finally get a timeline and form-factor hints for a standalone AI companion beyond apps and browsers, showing OpenAI’s ambition to build a “third device” alongside phone and laptop
The catch: legal slow-motion means delays and branding in limbo, privacy and real-world usefulness still a mystery until a prototype appears, so brace for a wild ride before you can actually try it yourself
TRENDING DISCUSSIONS
Too much AI?
The newsletter you just read sure is packed with AI—but Muhammad Nouman Ali thinks we’ve gone too far. He points out that “AI for this, AI for that” has become the default tagline for every launch, even when it adds zero value. That’s why he built HumanEye: resume reviews and career advice still deserve a real human’s insight.
He wants to know: are we slapping AI on products just to ride a hype wave? Have you seen features that felt forced or pointless? And where does human expertise still matter most—empathy, ethics, creativity, or something else?
Worth a skim if you’re tired of AI buzzwords drowning out genuine innovation.
Reply