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Build. Connect. Scale. All in One Place.We’ve been discussing this internally and wanted to get broader opinions.
With AI tools answering questions instantly and summarizing information, it seems like discovery is shifting away from traditional browsing.
At the same time, websites are still where businesses:
Present their brand properly
Share proof and detailed information
Structure their services clearly
Convert visitors into clients
It feels less like “websites vs AI” and more like a shift in how traffic reaches businesses.
Curious to hear from founders and developers here:
Are you seeing less importance in websites, or are they simply evolving?

Honestly, the barrier to launching a website is no longer technical - it's strategic.
I came across a great guide recently that reframes the whole no-code conversation. Most people pick a drag-and-drop builder, choose a pretty template, and wonder why signups don't come. The real issue? Strategy comes after tooling, when it should come first.
Here's what actually works:
Before touching any builder, lock in:
- Who your audience is
- What specific problem you're solving
- What proof you have
- What ONE action you want visitors to take
Then pick your tool based on weighted criteria - editing speed, SEO controls, integration depth, mobile reliability - not by watching demo videos.
A few other things that stuck with me from the guide:
→ AI is a draft accelerator, not a decision-maker. Use it for speed, then edit for clarity and credibility.
→ Most weak no-code sites fail because of vague messaging, not bad templates. "Innovative solutions for modern teams" tells nobody anything. "Launch conversion-ready pages in hours without developer dependencies" does.
→ Weekly iteration beats quarterly redesigns. Small, isolated experiments compound faster than big overhauls.
→ Proof should appear early — near your hero, not buried at the bottom where most people never scroll.
If you're building a landing page, product page, or event registration page without a dev team, this practical framework is worth bookmarking 👇
Would love to hear — what's been your biggest bottleneck with no-code tools? The tooling itself, or figuring out what to actually say on the page?
Anthropic is providing self-paced courses of around 1-2 hours each, which provides official certificate upon course completion.

Courses available for Free:
- Claude Code in Action
- Claude 101
- AI Fluency: Framework & Foundations
- Building with the Claude API
- Introduction to Model Context Protocol
- AI Fluency for Educators
- AI Fluency for Students
- Model Context Protocol: Advanced Topics
- Claude with Amazon Bedrock
- Claude with Google Cloud's Vertex AI
- Teaching AI Fluency
- AI Fluency for nonprofits
- Introduction to agent skills

If you're a founder building a content-driven business, original content is everything. It drives your SEO, builds authority, and keeps your audience coming back.
But let's be real. When you're scaling content production, plagiarism can slip in without anyone noticing. Outsourced writers, AI-generated drafts, repurposed content. It all adds risk.
We tested and compared the best plagiarism remover tools available in 2026 so founders and small teams don't have to waste time figuring it out themselves.
We also built a free tool you can try right now with no signup: https://plagiarismremover.ai/
Full comparison here:
https://plagiarismremover.ai/blog-post/best-plagiarism-remover-toolshttps://plagiarismremover.ai/blog-post/best-plagiarism-remover-tools
Roll-out of an AI-powered, secure and engaging messaging experience for millions of users in India, setting a new benchmark for a secure carrier-backed messaging service.

Airtel’s network intelligence to be combined with Google’s Rich Communications Services (RCS) platform and spam filtering for enhanced protections that significantly reduce mobile spam and digital fraud.
This will solve for the critical protection gap in non-telco communication platforms and standalone apps that are being increasingly been exploited by sophisticated bad actors, becoming common tools for financial fraud and invasive spam.
By extending the accountability of telecom-grade safeguards to the modern messaging experience, the messaging service will foster trust in enterprise communications by enabling enterprise customers to easily distinguish legitimate business messages from spam and stay protected.
The solution will also enable brands to build deeper engagement with their customers who will feel safer and in more control. This will, in turn, lead to enduring customer relationships which are imperative for business growth and success.
Source: Airtel
Wrote a deep dive comparing ChatGPT, Grammarly, and QuillBot for AI plagiarism removal. None of them were designed for this use case. That gap is exactly why we built PlagiarismRemover.AI as a purpose-built solution.
https://plagiarismremover.ai/blog-post/can-chatgpt-grammarly-quillbot-remove-ai-plagiarism
Lots of internships startups and even big companies try to hire are in unpaid category, and I feel that a paid-only internship platform should be more advantageous for students.
Cons:
Big internship/job platforms already have filters for paid internships too.
Getting initial traction and internship applications on the site
Monetizing the platform will need at least 1-2 yrs until reliability is built.
What's your opinions on this? Is the market too saturated, or is there still scope to build something meaningful to society, and also be able to monetize it long-term?
Shareholding pattern of Deepinder Goyal's new startup Temple after $54 Mn maiden funding

Notable investors 👇
- Deepinder Goyal
- Kunal Shah
- Vijay Shekhar Sharma
- Raj Shamani
- Steadview
- Peak XV
- Info Edge
- NKSquared
- Varun Alagh
- Abhiraj Bhal
Source: Entrackr

Most app landing pages look great but fail at one thing: helping visitors make a decision fast. The design is polished, the animations are smooth - yet people still bounce. Why? Because the page never answers the three core questions quickly enough: Is this for me? Can I trust it? What do I do next?
After analyzing dozens of high-performing pages, a clear set of patterns separates pages that rank and convert from those that just look pretty. Here are five you can apply right now.
1. Answer the Big Three Above the Fold
Your first screen has one job: confirm relevance. That means your hero section must immediately communicate who this is for, what outcome it creates, and what action to take next. If visitors need to scroll to understand your product, you've already lost them.
A practical first-screen stack looks like this: an outcome-led headline, a plain-language subheadline, one trust signal (a customer metric, logo, or result), and a single primary CTA with clear expectation-setting - not "Sign up" but "Launch your first page in 15 minutes."
2. Put Proof Next to Claims - Not Below Them
One of the most common conversion leaks is proof drift: you make a bold claim at the top, then bury the evidence three scrolls down. By the time visitors reach it, they've already left. Place one solid trust cue immediately near your first promise. Use quantified statements ("reduced launch time by 43%") rather than vague adjectives. Segment testimonials by buyer role — a founder quote converts better for founder traffic than a generic user review.
3. Give Every Section One Job
Pages with ten sections and no clear purpose feel busy but unconvincing. The strongest pages treat each section as a conversion task: clarify the mechanism, resolve an objection, demonstrate a use case, or trigger the next action. This turns content architecture into conversion logic. If a section doesn't serve a decision, cut it or rewrite it.
4. Handle Objections Explicitly
Top-performing pages don't hide hard questions - they surface them. Setup complexity, migration risk, team adoption, AI oversight boundaries - these are the things visitors quietly worry about and then go Google elsewhere. Build a short section (or FAQ block near the bottom) that answers these directly. Pages that do this keep users on-page and moving toward action instead of bouncing to look for answers elsewhere.
5. Design for Scan-First Reading
Most visitors scan before they commit to reading. Use short intro paragraphs, outcome-specific subheadings, and predictable section patterns. Scannability isn't about dumbing things down - it's a usability requirement. Pages that rank in competitive spaces are not simple; they are easy to navigate.

These patterns are part of a much deeper breakdown of what separates high-converting app landing pages from the rest. If you want the full framework - including 42 specific patterns with adaptation logic, implementation scenarios, and a 30-day build plan — the complete guide is worth a read: 42 Unique and Creative App Landing Page Patterns for 2026.
The core takeaway: a unique, creative landing page wins not through visual novelty, but through structure that reduces cognitive load and proof that arrives exactly when visitors need it.
At Temple, they are building the ultimate wearable for elite performance athletes. A device that measures what no other wearable in the world measures, with a level of precision that doesn't exist yet.

Roles they're hiring for:
- Analog Systems Engineers, Electronics Design Engineers
- Embedded Systems Engineers — low-level HW bring-up, embedded signal and image processing, embedded AI
- Design and Validation Engineers — sensors, actuators, battery, antenna, optics
- CMF Engineers, Adhesive Materials Engineers
- Sensor Algorithms Engineers — estimation theory, sensor fusion
- Deep Learning Engineers — ML model development for physiological metrics
- Computational Neuroscientists
- BCI Engineers — real-time EEG/EMG acquisition and processing
- Neural Decoding Researchers — brain activity to semantic mapping
- Computer Vision Engineers — facial microexpression, subvocal muscle detection
- Neuroimaging ML Engineers — multimodal sensor fusion
- Product Managers
Write to buiild[at]temple[dot]com with your core skill as the subject line.
Source: Deepinder Goyal
Supabase.co is inaccessible to users across multiple Indian ISPs, including Jio, Airtel, and ACT Fibernet, due to a ministry order.

Supabase is used by millions of developers worldwide, and millions of users in India are currently unable to access our platform due to these blocks.
The block stems from a Ministry of Electronics & IT (MeitY) order under Section 69A of India's IT Act 2000, enforced at the ISP level (Jio, Airtel, ACT Fibernet, etc.) on supabase.com and *.supabase.co domains.
No public details on the order number, date, or exact reason have been released by the government. Supabase reports their backend is fully operational and is engaging MeitY for resolution. Common workaround: switch DNS to 1.1.1.1 or use a VPN.
Source: Supabase
