Product Hunt Digest — 2026-06-11
Yesterday’s top five on Product Hunt clustered around a familiar ambition: let software carry more of the day, whether that means running your task list, making phone calls, watching an agent from the corner of your eye, or turning a vague goal into a steady learning plan.
Reflections
This was a leaderboard about delegation, but not in the old automation sense. The leading products framed software less as a static tool and more as an operator that can prepare, call, route, monitor, or adapt on a user’s behalf. Even the more infrastructure-heavy entry, Respan Gateway, fit the pattern by focusing on the practical machinery required to keep AI systems dependable once they leave the demo phase. It made for a day that felt narrower than usual, but also more coherent.
Themes
- AI assistants are moving from suggestion to execution, with Bond and Asmi AI both promising to take ownership of messy real-world follow-through.
- The support layer around AI products is maturing, with observability, evals, cost controls, and routing now packaged as a single operational surface.
- Ambient interfaces remain attractive when they reduce friction instead of adding spectacle; smart glasses only made the list here because the use case was concrete.
- Personal progress tools are still borrowing from coaching and accountability systems, but Journey Now tried to make that loop adaptive rather than rigid.
#1 Bond (https://www.producthunt.com/products/bond-12)
What it is: Bond is an executive-facing AI chief of staff that connects to workplace tools and turns scattered obligations into a live task system.
Why it stood out: The pitch is larger than a smarter to-do list. Bond tries to sit close to the flow of meetings, follow-ups, risks, and delegation, which gives it a more operational shape than most personal productivity software.
- It is designed to prepare users for meetings, draft follow-ups, surface blockers, and create action items instead of simply collecting reminders.
- The product description suggests it learns how a company works over time, which is a stronger claim than generic task automation and likely part of its appeal.
- It led the day by a clear margin with 665 upvotes and 178 comments.
#2 Asmi AI (https://www.producthunt.com/products/asmi-ai)
What it is: Asmi AI is a personal assistant that handles chores through voice calls, making bookings, coordinating with services, and dealing with the hold music and phone trees most people avoid.
Why it stood out: Many AI assistants still live inside chat boxes; Asmi pushes outward into the phone-based bureaucracy of everyday life. That makes the concept feel more tangible, even if the scope is necessarily narrow in this dataset.
- The daily interaction model is simple: it calls in the morning, you talk through the day, and it reports back over iMessage or WhatsApp.
- Its value rests on navigating IVR systems, waiting on hold, and carrying longer service conversations, which is a practical test of agent competence.
- It finished second with 461 upvotes and 142 comments, suggesting strong interest in AI that acts off-screen.
#3 Respan Gateway (https://www.producthunt.com/products/keywords-ai)
What it is: Respan Gateway is an AI gateway platform that combines model access with observability, evals, prompt management, monitors, and spending controls.
Why it stood out: This was the most infrastructure-minded product in the top five, and it landed because it addressed the unglamorous problem behind many AI launches: production systems are hard to operate once routing, retries, tracing, and costs all start interacting.
- It offers a single endpoint to more than 1,000 AI models, but the stronger story is the operational bundle around fallbacks, caching, alerts, and traces.
- The product is explicitly framed as an alternative to stitching together several separate tools just to understand what a live AI stack is doing.
- With 441 upvotes, it nearly matched the more consumer-facing launches, which says something about where developer attention is now.
#4 Terminal Mode by Even Realities (https://www.producthunt.com/products/terminal-mode-by-even-realities)
What it is: Terminal Mode brings an ambient terminal view to Even G2 smart glasses so developers can keep an eye on coding agents while longer tasks run elsewhere.
Why it stood out: Smart glasses pitches often drift into novelty, but this one had a specific and legible use case. It is less about replacing the laptop than about shortening the distance between an agent asking for input and a person able to respond.
- The product is tuned for workflows where an agent stalls, needs approval, or needs steering during long-running jobs.
- Its appeal depends on preserving flow: glance up, intervene, move on, and avoid hovering over a terminal window.
- It placed fourth with 404 upvotes and 88 comments, a strong showing for a hardware-adjacent developer tool.
#5 Journey Now (https://www.producthunt.com/products/journey-now)
What it is: Journey Now is a learning copilot that turns a goal into a step-by-step plan, then keeps adjusting the plan as pace, deadlines, and motivation shift.
Why it stood out: Compared with the day’s more agentic tools, Journey Now was quieter and more personal. Its appeal came from treating learning as an adaptive process rather than a fixed syllabus, with just enough social visibility to make progress feel shared.
- The product promises daily guidance and reflection, which positions it closer to a coach than a static course tracker.
- It also includes visibility into how friends are progressing, adding a lightweight accountability layer without making community the whole story.
- It rounded out the top five with 393 upvotes and 82 comments.