I'd look at engagement ratio before interest score when comparing Oopsie and Maven. A product can buy visibility. It can't buy sustained discussion.
Side-by-side comparison of Oopsie and Maven based on community engagement data.
Debug Flutter & React Native apps with AI & Session Replays
Follow interests, not influencers
I'd look at engagement ratio before interest score when comparing Oopsie and Maven. A product can buy visibility. It can't buy sustained discussion.
| Category | Oopsie | Maven |
|---|---|---|
| Android | Yes | Yes |
| Developer Tools | Yes | - |
| Social Media | - | Yes |
| iOS | Yes | - |
Hey everyone, π I am Vishalini, Founder of Zipy and weβre super excited to go live with Oopsie, AI based mobile monitoring product by Zipy on Product Hunt today! Huge thanks to @kevin for hunting us, @rohanrecommends for guidance, PH community and PH team who make this platform amazing. π€ What is Oo...
Big congrats @vishalini_paliwal1 and @msnkarthik for this. Looking forward how this can also help with understanding where we are losing users on the product.
This is an incredible step forward for debugging! I'm curiousβdo you plan to expand beyond Flutter and React Native to include frameworks like Xamarin or Ionic? That could widen your reach even further.
With both @evhead and @sama involved as investors , I'm very curious if a post-TikTok Twitter can gain traction and not go off the rails...
Great idea Can wait to use this
Love this! Does Maven show ads to its users? One of the things that drove me off social media was constant ads and consumerism making me feel like I needed more. If Maven keeps the platform ad-free and focused on ideas, I'm all in.
Oopsie leads on raw interest score. Oopsie leads on engagement ratio. Oopsie leads on both metrics. That doesn't happen often.
These products share 1 categories: Android. Moderate overlap suggests they target related but distinct use cases.
Oopsie is also tagged in Developer Tools, iOS, which Maven isn't. That suggests Oopsie positions itself more broadly or targets an adjacent audience.
Maven has unique category tags in Social Media. Different positioning can mean a different buyer profile, even within the same space.
Oopsie launched Dec 2024. Maven launched May 2024. Both launched the same year, meaning they faced similar market conditions and competition levels.
Pick Oopsie if you want the product with the larger community behind it; sustained discussion and active users are your priority; you need something that also covers iOS.
Pick Maven if community size matters less to you than engagement depth; you need something that also covers Social Media.
Oopsie: Oopsie by Zipy is the only AI-powered mobile debugging tool you need, offering βΆοΈ session replays, π€ error monitoring, π‘AI-summaries, and π₯ Firebase Crashlytics integration. Debug smarter and resolve Flutter and React Native issues faster with Zipy.
Maven: Twitter cofounder Ev Williams is backing a new social network called Maven, which trades likes and follows for algorithms designed to foster serendipity and deep discussion.
These products also compete in the Android category:
pom β Scan products to avoid harmful or unwanted ingredients (Interest: 515, Engagement: 0.13)
Soula Care β 24/7 AI-powered mental support for parenthood and pregnancy (Interest: 475, Engagement: 0.46)
Google AI Edge Gallery β Gallery of on-device ML/GenAI demos to try locally (Interest: 370, Engagement: 0.03)
Pizi β Turn your photos into product pages (Interest: 338, Engagement: 0.20)
Anonymous Health β Overcome addictions and unwanted habits (Interest: 321, Engagement: 0.06)
Hardcover β Discover, track and read life-changing books (Interest: 314, Engagement: 0.19)
Automatically. We compare products that share at least one category and have similar interest scores. Products too far apart in traction don't make for useful comparisons.
No. Interest is launch-day attention. Engagement ratio is a better quality signal. The product with more discussions per interest point usually has stronger product-market fit.
How directly these products compete. Three or more shared categories means they're going after the same user. One shared category means they approach the space from different angles. Zero overlap and they probably shouldn't be compared.
Comparisons are generated automatically when two products have enough data overlap. If the pair you want isn't here, the products might be in different categories or too far apart in engagement.
Either the product didn't meet our engagement threshold, or it doesn't share enough category tags with the other product to generate a meaningful comparison. We'd rather show no comparison than a misleading one.
Each product's data reflects its launch period. The comparison shows both products' engagement metrics from when they launched. The build date at the bottom of the page shows when the index was last refreshed.