gm builders, happy Wednesday.
Today’s toolkit: a note-whisperer that answers questions straight from your files, a one-click deck generator living inside your design canvas, and a page-cloner that spits out tailored URLs before the coffee refills. Grab your mug, clear the mental RAM, and dive in.
P.S. Got a launch that deserves the spotlight? Pitch us at editorial@producthunt.co 🫶

Snapdeck is a Figma plugin that turns any selection of frames, or a quick bullet list, into a full slide deck right on the canvas. Styles come from the file you’re in, pages drop in as editable frames, and you can hit Present without exporting a single PNG.
🔥 Our Take: Most presentation tools act like Figma isn’t the place you already live. Snapdeck stays put, spits out a deck that matches your mock-ups, and lets you worry about the story instead of chasing screenshots.

Tofu Pages is a Chrome extension that latches onto your existing site and cranks out personalized landing pages. Pick a persona, keyword, or prospect, hit duplicate, tweak a few fields, and a fresh URL is live, design intact, copy updated, no rebuild required.
🔥 Our Take: Anyone who’s ever spent an evening cloning pages by hand will appreciate this. Tofu lets you swap the pitch and ship a new link before the coffee gets cold—freeing you from the copy-paste grind.

Universal-Streaming is a new, real-time transcription API purpose-built for AI voice agents, so you can finally deliver conversations that feel natural and lightning-fast.
Think of it as the brains behind your voice UX:
And because we play well with others, you can drop Universal-Streaming straight into your favorite orchestration platforms—Vapi, LiveKit, Pipecat/Daily, and bring your STT, LLM, and TTS workflows together in one seamless hub.
Ready to sound smarter?

Google’s latest NotebookLM lets you dump PDFs, Drive files, or interview transcripts into one spot and ask questions like you’re texting a research assistant. It cites every answer, spins summaries, and can draft outlines without touching your original docs.
🔥 Our Take: It’s the first time “read the 80-page deck” can be replaced with “ask the deck what matters.” Handy for last-minute briefs—just double-check the quotes before you bet the pitch on them.

Yee Doong lobbed a big question: “What’s the hardest part of taking a product truly global?”
Replies zeroed in on the classics: localization that’s more culture than copy, privacy laws that change by postcode, payment systems that refuse to play nicely, and support pings that wake the team at 3 a.m. A few builders added a twist—AI that defaults to English even when users don’t, and low-bandwidth realities in places where “offline mode” isn’t a feature but a lifeline.
One theme: “global” sounds cool until you’re juggling five alphabets, three privacy laws, and users who want refunds before you’ve had breakfast. Worth a skim if your roadmap has more flags than features.