March 24, 2026ideas

Ideas Radar: March 25, 2026

# Ideas Radar: March 25, 2026

Today's scan reveals strong demand for AI agent infrastructure (identity, memory, auth), creator tools that replace human workflows end-to-end, and platforms that make crypto accessible to mainstream users.
πŸ’‘#1
An AI-native video editor is one of the most requested tools right now. Not AI that assists editing, but one where you describe what you want and it produces the final cut. Current editors bolt AI onto existing workflows. The opportunity is to rebuild the editing paradigm from scratch where the AI is the editor, not the assistant.
πŸ’‘#2
A truly multi-model agent orchestrator that dynamically routes tasks to hundreds of specialized models β€” including local ones β€” based on task type. Current agents are locked to one model. Speed, cost, and quality would all improve by an order of magnitude if the right model handled each subtask automatically.
πŸ’‘#3
Visibility into how AI recommends your product. Founders are already seeing ChatGPT traffic but have no way to know what queries triggered it. A dashboard showing which AI models mention your product, what prompts surface it, and how your AI visibility compares to competitors would be immediately valuable to any SaaS.
πŸ’‘#4
An on-demand ad discovery platform β€” a place where people can browse ads intentionally. Surprisingly high demand. The use case: researchers, marketers, and curious consumers who actually want to see creative advertising without the algorithmic feed. Think of it as a curated gallery of commercial creativity.
πŸ’‘#5
Anonymous gift delivery without knowing the recipient's address. Send them a link, they enter their address privately, the gift arrives. Solves a real social friction point β€” you want to send something nice but asking for an address feels awkward. Multiple people described this exact workflow independently.
πŸ’‘#6
A tool that converts online friendships to IRL meetups. Not a dating app, not Meetup β€” specifically for people who already have relationships online but lack an easy way to coordinate physical hangouts. The emotional need is clear and underserved.
πŸ’‘#7
Developer telemetry that monitors what developers do, not what apps do. Which packages they download, extensions they install, AI assistants they use, code they copy-paste. For engineering leaders who need visibility into how their teams actually work in the AI era. Privacy-sensitive but high-value.
πŸ’‘#8
On-chain stock trading for normal users β€” tap buy or sell, speculate on price, everything settles on blockchain invisibly. No KYC, no complexity. As stocks tokenize, the first app to make this feel like Robinhood but decentralized wins a massive market.
πŸ’‘#9
Granola-like meeting recorder that captures actual audio, not just AI-generated notes. Better transcription, better model, actual recordings you can go back to. Current tools summarize but don't preserve the source material.
πŸ’‘#10
An ICO aggregator like how Robinhood offers IPOs. As on-chain launches proliferate, there's no unified place to discover, compare, and participate. The Robinhood model applied to token launches.
πŸ’‘#11
A daily AI benchmark service that runs the same tests every day and alerts you when model performance regresses. Cloud providers quietly degrade models and no one notices until their production breaks. Continuous monitoring would be a subscription no-brainer.
πŸ’‘#12
Folding@home for AI β€” donate your unused Codex or Claude subscription credits to help maintain open-source software. Brilliant idea that aligns incentives: subscribers waste credits, open source needs compute, and the platform gets goodwill.
πŸ’‘#13
A compliance auditing company that audits other compliance companies. As AI and crypto create new regulatory layers, the auditors themselves need auditing. A meta-compliance play.
πŸ’‘#14
MCP servers for banks so AI agents can query financial statements directly and automate tax filing. Banking data is the last major API gap for agents. Whoever builds the Plaid-level abstraction for agent-native banking wins.
πŸ’‘#15
A privacy layer for wearables. Health devices share data promiscuously. A filter that controls what gets transmitted, what stays local, and what gets anonymized β€” without breaking device functionality.
πŸ’‘#16
## Eco Products Radar

| Product | Mentions |
|---------|----------|
| Claude Code / Codex | 8 |
| OpenClaw | 5 |
| Robinhood | 4 |
| Plaid | 3 |
| Granola | 3 |
| ChatGPT | 3 |
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