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What's your stack?
Plus new developer tools and discussions to get those cogs turning
The Breakpoint
Hey all, welcome back to The Breakpoint, our weekly newsletter covering everything in developer tools on Product Hunt.
The Latest
Five of the most interesting recent dev tool (or dev tool-adjacent) launches on the site.
GitHub Spark turns plain English into a full‑stack app repo with UI, database models, auth, AI endpoints and CI. Tweak layouts in the visual editor or dive into the code—no config required.
Lovable Agent Mode turns a plain‑English spec into real code. You ask for a login flow or data API. It breaks the work into steps. It writes the code. It runs tests. It hunts bugs. It pulls in libraries. It summarizes every change. You just review the results.
Naiad Lens scans your repo and turns it into interactive diagrams of architecture, sequence and activity. Click any node and jump right to the exact source line. Save and share so your docs never rot. Works with Java, Kotlin, Python, JavaScript, TypeScript and Go.
TurboStyle is a Chrome extension that lets you click on any page element to tweak spacing, colors, fonts and images right in your browser and then export clean CSS with a single click.
Chive lives in your menu bar and shows every Claude Code session at a glance. Active, idle or stuck, it’s all there. Rename by project, quit frozen processes with a click, and dive back into the right session. No setup required.
What’s in your stack?
Gabe wanted to know: “What’s the best vibe‑coding tool so far? Bonus points if we’ve never heard of it.”
In other words, what actually makes coding feel good—not just cool in a launch video?
Most replies sound familiar: tried a bunch, stuck with none. Cursor, Claude, Warp, Replit—they’re all in the mix, but Warp gets the most love for being fast, stable, and not full of weird token limits. A few people toss out newer names like Windsurf or Lovable, but nobody’s pretending any of this stuff is perfect. The vibe is strong until you hit your fourth rate limit and go crawling back to VS Code.