The problem: generative coding tools (Lovable, Bolt, Cursor, Claude, ChatGPT) have made it genuinely fast to build working software. But the distribution layer for these apps doesn't exist. Most AI-built apps die in a Discord message or a Reddit thread.
Stackhaus is a marketplace specifically for AI-generated applications. Every app is verified before listing. Users can browse by category, use case, or the AI/tool that built it. Launched with 1,204 apps.
Three things I'd love HN's take on: 1. Curation vs. scale — we manually verify every app now. Doesn't last at 10K listings. How have others handled quality gates? 2. The GPT-wrapper problem — how do you signal quality difference to users? 3. Filtering by underlying model as a trust proxy — does that hold up?
Not YC, not VC-backed. Just two people who thought this needed to exist. Brutal feedback welcome.