New consumer AI apps
- A batch of consumer AI apps recently launched on Product Hunt, spanning brand tracking, mood/habits coaching, and self-care tools. - Examples include Dageno AI for brand tracking and MindWeave for mood and habit support, among others. - These quick consumer launches illustrate increased experimentation in personalization and habit-oriented AI features across the market (x.com) (x.com).
A new crop of consumer artificial intelligence apps is landing on Product Hunt, with founders pitching tools for brand tracking, mood support, and self-care in fast public launches. (producthunt.com 1) (producthunt.com 2) One cluster targets marketers who want to know how chatbots describe their companies. Dageno says it was founded in 2024 and now helps “over 2,000 marketing teams” track brand visibility across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and other artificial intelligence platforms. (dageno.ai) Another set is aimed at personal routines rather than workplace analytics. MindWeave says its early-access app includes mood check-ins, habit tracking, focus timers, journaling, and an artificial intelligence companion, with a free plan and paid pricing still being finalized. (mindweaveapp.com) A separate iPhone app also called MindWeave is listed in Apple’s App Store as “Journal & Wellness,” with artificial intelligence coaching, mood and sleep tracking, Apple Health integration, and free limits of five coach messages a day and three analyses a week. (apple.com) Product Hunt’s own launch guide explains why these products keep appearing there: makers can submit products daily, compete for homepage ranking, and launch for free starting at 12:01 a.m. Pacific Time. That setup favors quick tests of consumer ideas before founders spend heavily on distribution. (producthunt.com) The product mix also shows how consumer artificial intelligence has moved from broad chatbots to narrower tools built around one repeated task. On Product Hunt, recent launches include not just general artificial intelligence software but dedicated categories for mental health, self-care, and “GEO tools,” shorthand for products built around visibility in artificial intelligence search. (producthunt.com 1) (producthunt.com 2) That brand-visibility niche is getting crowded. Omnia, which launched on Product Hunt about two months ago, pitches itself as a tool that shows “how AI sees your brand,” monitors prompts, benchmarks competitors, and helps create content for citations in artificial intelligence search. (producthunt.com) The wellness side is crowded too, but the new pitches are getting more specific about the behavior they want to change. Nomie, a Product Hunt launch from last month, says it is building an artificial intelligence wellness app that turns “doomscrolling into intentional self-care” through guided resets, breathing exercises, journaling, and emotional support. (producthunt.com) What ties these launches together is not one shared feature but one shared bet: that users will try small, specialized artificial intelligence products if they promise a clearer daily outcome than a general chatbot does. Product Hunt’s stream of launches suggests founders are testing that bet in public, one niche at a time. (producthunt.com)