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Laguna-M.1 trends on Hugging Face, Cloudback MCP Server and Agent 37 on Product Hunt | Daily AI roundup cover

Laguna-M.1 trends on Hugging Face, Cloudback MCP Server and Agent 37 on Product Hunt

By Harsh Desai
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TL;DR

Poolside models gain traction on Hugging Face and Product Hunt while new backup and agent tools appear for immediate use in existing workflows.

What shipped

On 21 June Poolside placed two entries in public AI directories while independent tools for backups and customer agents also launched. The releases focus on text generation and agent control rather than broad platform overhauls. Builders can test the models and tools directly through the listed hubs.

Hugging Face trending

Laguna-M.1: Poolside's text-generation model reached the top of the Hugging Face Hub charts. Users can fine-tune it for long coding sessions and run inference without local servers, giving developers a direct comparison point against earlier open models.

Product Hunt picks

Poolside followed its Hugging Face entry with a Product Hunt listing for its Laguna models aimed at extended agent tasks. Two separate tools also appeared for backup control and per-customer agents. The three listings together show separate teams shipping narrow utilities rather than full platforms.

  • Cloudback MCP Server The tool adds backup controls inside Claude, Cursor, and VS Code. SMB owners can schedule and restore files without switching applications.
  • Laguna by Poolside Poolside released foundation models built for multi-step coding agents. Vibe Builders can assign them to projects that run across several hours instead of single prompts.
  • Agent 37 The service creates a dedicated Hermes or OpenClaw agent for each customer. Businesses gain a way to test personalized support without building the agents from scratch.

What this means for you

For Vibe Builders: Poolside's Laguna models now sit on both Hugging Face and Product Hunt, so you can copy the model card and test agentic coding flows in one afternoon. Cloudback MCP Server and Agent 37 give you ready-made utilities to add backups or customer agents inside tools you already open. Start with the Laguna-M.1 card to see whether the fine-tuning examples match the length of tasks you ship.

For Non-techies: Three new listings let you manage backups from Claude or VS Code and assign separate agents to customers without extra setup. Laguna models focus on longer coding work that may reduce repeated prompting. Test Cloudback first if file recovery is a daily need, then move to Agent 37 for support experiments.

For Developers: Laguna-M.1 on Hugging Face provides a concrete benchmark against prior open models for long-horizon agent tasks. Cloudback MCP Server and Agent 37 demonstrate narrow MCP and agent deployment patterns you can inspect in public repos. Run the supplied evaluation numbers on Laguna-M.1 against your current stack before adding either Product Hunt tool to production pipelines.

What to watch next

Track whether Poolside releases fine-tuning scripts or evaluation logs for Laguna-M.1 this week. Watch for follow-up listings that connect the MCP Server to additional IDEs. Note any new agent templates that reference the Hermes or OpenClaw names.

Harshs take

The day shows two Poolside entries and two narrow utilities rather than coordinated platform moves. The pattern suggests vendors are still shipping point solutions that require users to stitch workflows together. A contrarian read is that the trending model and the Product Hunt tools will stay separate unless one vendor publishes an integration path within the next seven days. Builders should pick one item, run its example notebook or demo, and record the exact prompt length or backup size it handles before adding anything else to their stack.

by Harsh Desai

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