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Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from June 10, 2026

Yesterday's standout was Honen, an automated teaching infrastructure that captures real workflows to train new team members.

Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from June 10, 2026

Yesterday brought a curious mix of tools to the surface, blending the practical with the nostalgic and the ambitious. While we didn't see a flood of new developer tools hitting the market, the launches that did appear hint at where creators and teams are focusing their energy: automation, learning, and reclaiming a bit of digital history. From infrastructure that teaches itself to a museum you can run on your desktop, here’s what caught our eye from June 10.

Honen

The idea of automated teaching infrastructure for a company sounds like something from a corporate training brochure, but Honen frames it more simply. It’s a system designed to capture how work actually gets done—the clicks, the decisions, the workflows—and turn that into a living knowledge base that can train new team members or even guide automated agents. The problem it tackles is the silent, draining one of institutional knowledge walking out the door every time someone leaves or switches projects. For a growing startup or a team with complex, undocumented processes, this could be invaluable. The fact that it’s free at launch is a strong incentive to try it out, though the real test will be how seamlessly it integrates into the daily grind without becoming a surveillance tool. If it can observe and teach without getting in the way, it might just stick.

Read more about Honen

Browse.sh

Giving AI agents "muscle memory for automating the web" is a compelling pitch. Browse.sh appears to be a platform for recording and replicating browser-based actions, moving beyond simple macros into something more contextual and robust. Think of it as a way to teach a software assistant not just to click a button, but to navigate a login flow, handle a CAPTCHA service, or extract data from a dynamically updating table. For developers and operations teams drowning in repetitive web tasks, this could offload a significant amount of manual work. The success of such a tool always hinges on its reliability; the web is a fragile place, and scripts break with the slightest UI change. If Browse.sh can build in enough adaptability and error-handling to create durable automations, it will have solved a very real pain point.

Explore Browse.sh

Vaani

Lip-synced AI dubbing is moving quickly from a novelty to a necessity for global content creation. Vaani enters this space, offering creators, brands, and studios a way to dub video content while matching the speaker’s lip movements. The applications are obvious: making educational courses accessible in multiple languages, localizing marketing campaigns without expensive reshoots, or even helping indie filmmakers reach wider audiences. The quality of the lip sync and the naturalness of the generated voice will be everything here. Current technology can sometimes drift into the uncanny valley, where the motion is close but not quite right, pulling the viewer out of the experience. As a free launch offering, Vaani is clearly looking for early adopters to stress-test its models. For anyone with a multilingual audience, it’s worth a curious look.

See Vaani in action

Supaste

In the realm of simple, useful utilities, Supaste arrives as a clipboard manager for macOS. It’s a well-trodden category, but one where a clean, efficient, and reliable option is always welcome. The problem it solves is the universal frustration of copying one thing and immediately needing the previous item you had copied. For developers, writers, or anyone who constantly moves snippets of text, code, or links around, a good clipboard manager is a silent productivity booster. The challenge for Supaste isn’t about doing something new, but about doing it better—with a flawless keyboard shortcut, intuitive history search, and perhaps syncing across devices. Without a price tag, it lowers the barrier to switch from whatever built-in or ad-hoc solution you’re currently using.

Check out Supaste

The Virtual OS Museum

This one is a delightful departure from the rest. The Virtual OS Museum lets you relive vintage operating systems like Windows 95, Mac OS 9, or even older, right on your modern desktop. It’s not just a screenshot gallery; it’s about emulation and interaction. For developers interested in computing history, for designers curious about UI evolution, or for anyone feeling a wave of nostalgia, this is a digital playground. It solves the problem of accessibility—these old systems can be hard to run on contemporary hardware. There’s also an educational angle, providing a hands-on way to see how far we’ve come (and perhaps what we’ve left behind). While it might not be a daily driver like a clipboard manager, it serves as a wonderful reminder of the culture and context behind our current tools.

Visit The Virtual OS Museum


Quick Links to Yesterday’s Launches: