I hope your sunday scaries aren't hitting too bad on this fine morning. In today's Roundup, we've got a fresh DeepSeek model, Microsoft flexing on everyone, some trending discussions, and of course, some of the most stand out products from this week. Let's go.

If you're building voice applications and still struggling with transcription accuracy, it's time to meet Deepgram Nova-3. Built for the most challenging acoustic environments, from packed call centers to high-stakes trading floors, Nova-3 delivers real-time transcription with industry-leading accuracyā54.2% better for streaming, 47.4% for pre-recorded data. Plus, you can adapt industry-specific vocabulary on the fly, without model retraining. Finally, enterprise speech-to-text that speaks your language.




DeepSeek just introducedĀ Native Sparse AttentionĀ (NSA), a new way to make long-context AI models faster and cheaper. It reduces the compute needed for training and inference while keeping up with full-attention models in benchmarks. If it works as advertised, it could make large-scale AI more accessible without the usual hardware demands.
But the timing isnāt great. The U.S. government is already scrutinizing DeepSeek, with the National Security Council reviewing its risks and multiple states banning it from government devices. NASA and the Department of Defense have followed suit, and other countriesāincluding Italy, Australia, and South Koreaāare placing restrictions over privacy and security concerns.

Microsoft just dropped what might be their wildest claim yet: theyāve invented a whole new state of matter. While Apple is busy shaving millimeters off the iPhone, Microsoft says theyāve built a quantum chip powered by āMajorana particlesā (which, if real, would mean a massive leap in quantum computing). Their new Majorana 1Ā chip uses a topological core to create more stable qubitsāessentially the key to making quantum computers practical instead of just expensive science projects.
The stakes? If this works, quantum computers could one day crack problems todayās supercomputers wouldnāt solve before the heat death of the universe. That includes AI breakthroughs, next-gen materials, and, probably, some wild cybersecurity implications. But hereās the catch: the physics world isnāt entirely convinced yet. Microsoft has been betting on Majorana particles for years, but proving their existence (and their usefulness) is still up for debate.
So, either weāre on the verge of a quantum revolutionāor Microsoft just pulled the tech equivalent of claiming to have seen Bigfoot.
Here are some of the most interesting discussions on the Product Hunt Forums this week. We've got everything from sharing the love for dead apps, to database debates, and shipping apps with AI.
šĀ What's your favorite defunct consumer social app?
š¤Ā Neon vs Supabase (vs others?) what did you pick and why?
š Ā Has anyone built a production app with bolt.new?
š§āš»Ā What's your Replit "vibe coding" workflow?Ā