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RE:Lifesum: AI Calorie Tracker v20.5.2 [Premium] [Mod Extra]
Lifesum: AI Calorie Tracker v20.5.2 [... track your meals, enhanced by AI. Welcome to a new era... everyday life, Lifesum provides the tools and support to make your ...
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forum.mobilism.org |
Balatan |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:Do you realise all those people who hate AI...
TS like not sure what is AI Maybe think AI ish those tools that help to generate stupid photos and cute cat/dog/AT mini drama videos only. It can be like 10 over areas/topics.
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forums.hardwarezone.com.sg |
Monstruo^ |
May 1, 2026 |
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Pentagon taps 7 tech companies for classified AI, shuns Anthropic - CNN
... to use their artificial intelligence tools in its classified networks. Not... the governments use of AI in warfare. But the White... technology breakthroughs. 0:00 CNN AI correspondent Hadas Gold reports on ... cybersecurity reporter Sam Sabin on AI companies' deals for classified work ...
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www.democraticunderground.com |
TexasTowelie |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:.free - gTLD (Generic Top-Level Domain)
...is primarily used for: Trading Tools: Free indicators, signals, ...versions of SEO research tools. Audit Tools: Automated website performance ...for "Free" or "Freemium" tools. These are tech-savvy founders who...Outbound articles and tools How to leverage an Ai Assistant to ... Outbound articles and tools How to leverage an Ai Assistant to find ...Outreach List of FREE tools for outbound domain sales Outbound...
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www.namepros.com |
Eric Lyon |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:Weekly Activity Report As A Moderator Of Steem Kids & Parents. [ May 01, 2026]
...❌ Plagiarism Free | ✅❌ AI Free | ✅❌ Bot Free... this Week** |-| --- * These tools are used to check the.../ https://smallseotools.com/plagiarism-checker/ * These tools are used to check the... CSL to increase their power. * AI Content Detector: [Zerogpt](https://www....zerogpt.com/), [Contentatscale](https://contentatscale.ai/ai-content-detector/)/, [Corrector.app](https://corrector...
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steemit.com |
m-fdo |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:WTF is a LORA
LORA is basically a way to fine-tune AI models without needing a massive GPU farm. great for niche tools if you want specific outputs without spending a fortune on compute
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www.blackhatworld.com |
Geotech_ |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:Realism Invictus
... timber harvesting for buildings and tools/weapons which still leaves the... on the fact that the AI doesn't seem to utilize the ... in the eyes of the AI without chopping them down. In ... doesn't work on the modpack's AI except for bugfixes. But yeah, .... Then it's upto the player/AI to decide if that tile ...
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forums.civfanatics.com |
MadoKaraMieru |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:🤖 Best AI Tools for Developers in 2026: What Are Your Must-Have Tools?
One underrated tool that has made the biggest difference for me is not an AI assistant itself, but what you configure around it. A per-stack CLAUDE.md (for Claude Code) or .cursorrules (for Cursor/Windsurf) file with 10-15 well-scoped rules transforms output quality more than switching models. The pattern that works: Anti-patterns list — not "use X" (the AI already knows X), but "never use Y ...
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github.com |
oliviacraft |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:🤖 Best AI Tools for Developers in 2026: What Are Your Must-Have Tools?
One underrated tool that has made the biggest difference for me is not an AI assistant itself, but what you configure around it. A per-stack CLAUDE.md (for Claude Code) or .cursorrules (for Cursor/Windsurf) file with 10-15 well-scoped rules transforms output quality more than switching models. The pattern that works: Anti-patterns list — not "use X" (the AI already knows X), but "never use Y ...
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github.com |
oliviacraft |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:Introducing the All-New WDWMagic Park Hours Calendar
... with a stack of new tools designed to answer the questions... Out of It Use the AI for multi-park, multi-day questions. The... whole trip, just ask the AI — it'll pull everything together in ....com We hope the new tools make your trip planning a ...
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forums.wdwmagic.com |
wdwmagic |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:The "Ark", what needs to happen, and how?
Depending on your feels about AI, this looks interesting github.com GitHub - Crosstalk-Solutions/project-nomad: Project N.O.M.A.D, is a self-contained, offline... Project N.O.M.A.D, is a self-contained, offline survival computer packed with critical tools, knowledge, and AI to keep you informed and empowered—anytime, anywhere.
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overgrow.com |
tleaves |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:AI Data Centers (Long Post)
... in the US. "Products (like tools or electronics) are manufactured almost... packaging to get the label." AI. Also: "Products with minor American...
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www.seniorforums.com |
VaughanJB |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:Snap! -- Brain Implant Trials, Void of Bots and Scams, World’s Thinnest Car
... Odd1536×386 27.3 KB AI Is Making the Internet Feel... websites. The findings say that AI plays a big role in ...% of newly created websites used AI tools in some way or another ... on how humans working with AI tools might make better decisions, which... gets FDA approval for trials AI Is Making the Internet Feel...
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community.spiceworks.com |
Suzanne-Spiceworks |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:Snap! -- Brain Implant Trials, Void of Bots and Scams, World’s Thinnest Car
... Odd1536×386 27.3 KB AI Is Making the Internet Feel... websites. The findings say that AI plays a big role in ...% of newly created websites used AI tools in some way or another ... on how humans working with AI tools might make better decisions, which... gets FDA approval for trials AI Is Making the Internet Feel...
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community.spiceworks.com |
Suzanne-Spiceworks |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:Bump postcss from 8.5.3 to 8.5.13 in /js/web/test/e2e/exports/testcases/vite-default
... annotation cleaning performance (by CodeAnt AI). 8.5.6 Fixed ContainerWithChildren....json → exports compatibility with some tools (by @JounQin ). 8.5... annotation cleaning performance (by CodeAnt AI). 8.5.6 Fixed ContainerWithChildren....json → exports compatibility with some tools (by @JounQin ). 8.5...
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github.com |
dependabot |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:PC Gaming (Συζήτηση) v2
Παιζει να ειναι με ολα τα AI tools που κανουν clopy - paste assets και maps . Ακριβως οτι δε θελαμε αλλο ενα online co op .
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www.insomnia.gr |
Mhlogiatros |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:Change the Scalar check in astype so it accepts only np objects
... saw a bug in astype. AI Disclosure No AI tools used
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github.com |
mncrftfrcnm |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:nrf/boards: Use 64 byte raw-paste buffer on PCA10031.
Summary Tiny fix: Apply the same workaround as added in cc7eb1a for other boards to the NRF51-Dongle, since it also suffers from the same limitation. This change makes it possible to run unit tests against it. Generative AI I did not use generative AI tools when creating this PR.
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github.com |
DvdGiessen |
May 1, 2026 |
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RE:[Unity 3D] [C#] [Multiplayer] [All Genres] Dragon Egg Studio — Veteran Game Development Studio Available for Hire
... 3D (primary engine, 20+ years) AI & AI-driven NPC systems Multiplayer... application architecture Cross-platform server compatibility AI integration & machine learning SQL... Android Developer Challenge — Winner, Productivity Tools Academic & Professional: Stanford University... Certificates: Advanced AI, Applied Cryptography, Robotic Car Programming...
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discussions.unity.com |
elder_dragon_phil |
May 1, 2026 |
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Claude-powered AI coding agent deletes entire company database in 9 seconds — backups zapped, after Cursor tool powered by Anthropic's Claude goes rogue
Update: https://www.pcgamer.com/software/ai/here-we-go-again-ai-deletes-entire-company-database-and-all-backups-in-9-seconds-then-cheerfully-admits-i-violated-every-principle-i-was-given/ submitted by /u/Jack1101111 to r/pcmasterrace [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Jack1101111 |
Apr 28, 2026 |
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Claude-powered AI coding agent deletes entire company database in 9 seconds — backups zapped, after Cursor tool powered by Anthropic's Claude goes rogue
submitted by /u/WouldbeWanderer to r/technology [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
WouldbeWanderer |
Apr 27, 2026 |
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YouTube Opens Up AI Deepfake Detection Tool to All of Hollywood; The tool will flag potentially infringing content, like a star playing a role in fan-generated movie, for a possible takedown.
submitted by /u/MarvelsGrantMan136 to r/movies [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
MarvelsGrantMan136 |
Apr 21, 2026 |
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yourAiToolsBoreMe
submitted by /u/heckingcomputernerd to r/ProgrammerHumor [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
heckingcomputernerd |
Apr 19, 2026 |
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I tested 40+ AI tools this month. Here are 5 that are actually worth your time (and aren't just GPT wrappers)
I have been in a bit of a rabbit hole this month. Every morning there are new AI tools being launched, posted about, and hyped across every subreddit and newsletter. Most of them are genuinely just a thin layer on top of GPT with a nice landing page and a $20 per month price tag. But a few of them are actually building something with real thought behind it. Here are the 5 that made it into my actual daily routine and why. 1.Perplexity AI - Research and search I have almost completely replaced Google. Every answer comes with cited sources you can click and verify, so it is actually trustworthy for research. I use it 10 to 15 times a day for anything from quick lookups to deep dives. The difference between this and a regular search engine is that it thinks before it answers instead of just returning links. 2.CuriousCats AI - News and information Most AI news tools are just headline summarizers. This one builds a feed that actually gets smarter over a few days, has zero ads, and has a natural stopping point so you are not scrolling forever. My daily news time dropped from 35 minutes across multiple apps to about 12 minutes of focused reading. Breaking news can lag but for daily catch up it is the cleanest experience I have found. 3.Granola - Meeting notes Runs silently in the background during any call and produces structured, readable notes when it is done. Not a raw transcript, something that actually makes sense to read back. Saves me 15 to 25 minutes per meeting on writeups. If you are in back to back calls this one pays for itself very quickly. 4. Napkin AI - Visual thinking Paste any block of text and it generates clean visual frameworks and diagrams automatically. Great for turning messy brainstorms into something you can share with a client or team without spending an hour in Figma. The output quality is higher than you would expect and it keeps getting better. 5 Rows AI - Spreadsheets and data Ask it questions about your data in plain language and it runs the analysis correctly. Handles the kind of tasks that used to mean hiring someone or watching YouTube tutorials for an afternoon. Replaced a significant chunk of my basic Excel work within the first week. The thing all five have in common is focus. They picked one problem, solved it properly, and did not try to become an everything app. That is the pattern I keep seeing in tools that actually stick. Happy to go deeper on any of these if you have questions. submitted by /u/itsmeAki to r/AIToolsAndTips [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
itsmeAki |
Apr 16, 2026 |
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Which AI tool has genuinely become part of your daily life?
Not talking about tools you tried once and forgot about. I mean the ones that are open every single day without thinking about it. For me that tool is CuriousCats AI. I know news apps sound boring compared to everything else happening in AI right now but this one genuinely changed my mornings. I used to jump between Google News, Apple News and Twitter every morning and still felt uninformed 40 minutes later. CuriousCats replaced all of that with about 10 to 12 minutes of focused reading. No ads, no infinite scroll, short summaries with actual context, and a feed that gets noticeably smarter after a few days of use. The feature I use most is the why does this matter button on any story. For tech news where half the announcements are overhyped it cuts through the noise really fast. It is not perfect. Breaking news lags a bit and local coverage is thin. But for staying informed on tech, business and world news without losing your morning to it, nothing else comes close for me right now. submitted by /u/Hakuna_Depota to r/techforlife [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Hakuna_Depota |
Apr 15, 2026 |
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Which AI Tools Are Really Worth Using for everyday?
There are so many AI tools out there it’s easy to get confused about where to start. I want to know that actually make work easier, save time or help small teams run smoothly. Tools that help with things like writing content, automating repetitive tasks answering customer questions or managing social media usually make the biggest difference. what AI tools are you actually using that make your work easier every day? submitted by /u/Tiny-Base-1533 to r/AIToolMadeEasy [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Tiny-Base-1533 |
Apr 6, 2026 |
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You don't need to pay for AI tools right now. here's everything free.
nobody told me how much was just sitting there for free. i spent the first six months paying for things i didn't need to. not because the paid versions aren't good. just because i didn't know the free alternatives were this capable. three weeks of digging. here's the honest list. for writing and thinking: Claude free tier is Sonnet. same model quality. just has a message limit. if you're not burning through 50 messages a day it's genuinely enough for serious work. ChatGPT free gets you GPT-4o. limited but real. more than enough for focused single-session work. for research: Perplexity free gives you real-time web search with source citations. five pro searches a day. unlimited standard. i use this more than google now. for images: Leonardo AI gives you 150 credits daily. that's roughly 50 images. i have never once hit that ceiling in a normal day. for learning AI properly: Google's generative AI path. Microsoft AI fundamentals. IBM's full certificate on Coursera — audit it free. DeepLearningAI short courses by Andrew Ng — one to two hours each, zero fluff. Anthropic's public prompt engineering guide — better than most paid courses. Harvard CS50 AI on edX — free to audit. combined that's probably 60+ hours of structured education from the people actually building this technology. for automation: Zapier free tier handles five automated workflows. enough to eliminate at least two recurring tasks you're doing manually right now. for presentations: Gamma free tier. describe your deck, it builds the structure. ten generations free before you hit a wall. enough to see if it changes how you work. the thing that surprised me most: free in 2026 is what paid looked like in 2023. the gap has genuinely closed. the free tiers exist now not because companies are being generous — but because getting you into the habit is worth more to them than the $20. which means you can learn, build, create, and ship real things without spending anything. the only thing free tiers won't give you is uninterrupted flow at scale. if AI is inside your workflow every single day, you'll hit limits. that's when upgrading one specific tool makes sense. but that's a decision you make after you've built the habit. not before. AI Community & AI tools Directory what's the best free AI tool you're using that most people haven't found yet? submitted by /u/AdCold1610 to r/PromptEngineering [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
AdCold1610 |
Mar 30, 2026 |
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i tested 47 AI tools in 90 days. here's the honest tier list nobody writes.
everyone writes "top 10 AI tools you NEED" posts. nobody writes the honest one. so here it is. tools that actually changed how i work (not just impressed me for 20 minutes): NotebookLM — underrated to the point it's embarrassing. i fed it 6 research papers, a podcast transcript, and my own notes. it synthesized a FAQ i couldn't have written myself. zero hallucinations because it only works with what you give it. this is the only AI tool i've seen that makes reading faster without making you dumber. Perplexity — replaced google for anything where i need a source trail. not for creative work. purely for "i need to know something true, fast." Claude (long context) — if you're not using it for document analysis you're leaving money on the table. dropped a 90-page legal doc in once. the summary was better than what the lawyers sent me. Gamma — i was a presentation person. past tense. i describe the deck, it builds the structure, i just edit. what used to take 3 hours is 25 minutes. tools that are good but people use wrong: ChatGPT — phenomenal if your prompts are structured. average if they're not. most people blame the model when the prompt is the actual problem. it's like blaming a calculator for giving wrong answers when you typed the equation wrong. Midjourney — people use it to generate random art. the real use case is mood boarding and visual thinking. if you treat it as a brainstorm tool, not a final output tool, it's incredible. Zapier AI — massively underused. i automated my entire weekly reporting workflow. 0 code. 2 hours of setup. saved me ~5 hours a week since. tools that are overhyped right now (sorry): most AI writing assistants — they write in the same voice. a flattened, optimistic, slightly breathless voice that sounds like every other AI content. if you're using one without heavy editing, your content sounds like everyone else's content. AI video generators (most of them) — not there yet for anything professional. great for memes and personal projects. the uncanny valley is still very real. browser AI extensions — i've installed and deleted 11 of these. they mostly just add a chat button on top of whatever you're already doing. rarely worth the permission access they ask for. the meta-observation nobody talks about: the gap between people who get real ROI from AI and people who don't isn't the tools. it's the prompts. same tool. same model. completely different output quality. someone who understands how to structure context, set constraints, chain tasks, and specify format will get 10x better results than someone who just types a sentence and hopes. we've spent years learning excel shortcuts, keyboard macros, SQL queries. prompting is the new version of that skill. except almost nobody is treating it seriously enough to actually study it. what's the one AI tool that actually stuck for you after the hype wore off? genuinely curious — the comments on these posts are always more useful than the post itself. Ai tool Directory submitted by /u/AdCold1610 to r/PromptEngineering [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
AdCold1610 |
Mar 24, 2026 |
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What are the most actually useful Ai tools you use daily?
Not the hyped ones - the ones you genuinely rely on. For me recently: ChatGPT for quick tasks Perplexity for research Notion Al for organizing thoughts Looking to discover more practical tools. submitted by /u/Witty_Historian_9914 to r/AIToolsAndTips [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Witty_Historian_9914 |
Mar 24, 2026 |
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Best uncensored AI image gen tools — my top picks (2026)
I tested a bunch of uncensored AI tools for image + RP, ranking based on how open they actually are, features, and consistency (a lot claim “uncensored” but still filter tbh). Top Uncensored AI Platforms: - Grok, 4.8/5 → One of the more open mainstream options for chat, but still not fully uncensored and pretty limited on image/video side. - Eternal AI, 4.8/5 → Truly uncensored image + video gen, plus chat with strong memory and realistic convos that don’t break. also has free daily credits. - Ourdream AI, 4.7/5 → All-in-one with chat, image, video, but can get inconsistent depending on how far you push it. - Secrets AI, 4.7/5 → High-quality visuals and realism, but more structured and less flexible for custom scenarios. - Soulkyn AI, 4.6/5 → Community-driven with uncensored chat + image gen, lots of variety but quality can vary. - SpicyChat / GirlfriendGPT, 4.5/5 → Good for RP, but more companion-style and not as strong on consistency or visuals. - DreamGF AI, 4.5/5 → Dating-sim style with image + video features, more guided experience but less flexible. - Nectar AI, 4.4/5 → Customizable personalities + solid image gen, but leans more romantic/companion than fully open. A few things i noticed: - many tools now combine chat + image/video (Eternal AI, Soulkyn, DreamGF) - most “uncensored” tools (like Grok) still have soft filters - privacy matters → some (Eternal AI, Ourdream) focus on things like end-to-end encryption - some platforms (like Secrets AI, Ourdream) keep visuals more consistent across prompts My honest take: Grok is decent for open chat, but Eternal AI and Ourdream stands out if you want actually uncensored image + video + chat all in one. I made this review based on a comparison spreadsheet i found that lists some decent uncensored ai tools Curious what others are using rn, anything better i should try? submitted by /u/ManufacturerOld6635 to r/AIJailbreak [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
ManufacturerOld6635 |
Mar 18, 2026 |
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I tested 40+ AI tools this month. Here are 5 that are actually worth your time (and aren't just GPT wrappers).
Look, we all know ChatGPT and Claude are great, but the amount of absolute garbage AI tools flooding the market right now is insane. I spent the last month testing a bunch of niche tools to see what actually works for real-world productivity and doesn't just send API calls to OpenAI. Here are 5 tools that genuinely surprised me (no affiliate links, just sharing what works): 1. Google NotebookLM What it does: You upload your PDFs, notes, or web links, and it creates a closed-loop AI that only answers based on your documents. Why it’s better than standard prompting: It practically eliminates hallucinations because it strictly cites your uploaded sources. Also, the "Audio Overview" feature turns your dry documents into a shockingly realistic 2-person podcast discussing the material. It's a game-changer for digesting long research papers. Cost: Free. 2. Cursor What it does: An AI-first code editor built on top of VS Code. Why it’s essential: It doesn't just autocomplete like GitHub Copilot; it understands your entire codebase. You can highlight a chunk of code and prompt it to "refactor this to match the logic in file X" and it applies the changes perfectly. If you write any code at all, this will save you hours. Cost: Free tier available / $20/mo Pro. 3. AnythingLLM What it does: An all-in-one desktop app for local RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation). Why it’s essential: If you want to chat with your own highly sensitive work documents but refuse to upload them to cloud services, this is the solution. It connects seamlessly to local models and lets you build completely private knowledge bases on your own hard drive. Cost: Free / Open Source. 4. Ollama What it does: Lets you run powerful open-source models entirely offline on your own hardware. Why it's essential: Total privacy and zero subscription fees. A year ago, running local AI was a massive headache. Now, Ollama makes it incredibly easy—it's literally just a single command to download and run models locally. Cost: Free / Open Source. 5. WhisperX (or MacWhisper for Apple users) What it does: Runs robust transcription models locally on your machine. Why it’s essential: Stop paying monthly fees to transcription websites. This gives you perfectly accurate, timestamped transcriptions of meetings, lectures, or videos. It works completely offline, ensures no one else has your audio data, and processes incredibly fast. Cost: Free. If you're exploring how these tools fit into real-world business workflows, check out this breakdown of practical applications in our guide on AI use cases from startups. What are some actually useful, obscure AI tools you guys are using daily that aren't getting enough hype? Let's build a good list in the comments. submitted by /u/netcommah to r/ArtificialInteligence [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
netcommah |
Mar 17, 2026 |
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I made $2,300 in 90 days using AI tools anyone can access for free — here's the exact breakdown
Let me be real with you — 90 days ago I was skeptical. Every second post on here was someone claiming to make thousands with AI and I assumed it was all either exaggerated or required some secret skill I didn't have. Turns out I was half right. A lot of it IS exaggerated. But some of it is very, very real — and the gap between the two is just knowing which methods are actually worth your time. Month 1 — $0. Yes, zero. I spent the entire first month doing what most people do — chasing the wrong things. Tried selling AI generated images. Crickets. Tried building a "faceless YouTube channel." Three videos, 34 views total, one of them was my mum. Tried selling prompt packs on Etsy. Made $4. I was about to quit. Then I asked myself a question that changed everything: "What do real businesses with real money actually need help with right now?" That one shift in thinking made months 2 and 3 completely different. Month 2 — $740 I stopped chasing passive income fantasies and started offering actual services. First I tried AI writing. Small businesses need blog posts, email newsletters, and social media captions constantly — and most business owners would rather eat glass than write them. I used Claude and ChatGPT to produce high quality content in about 45 minutes per piece and charged $75–$150 per post. Posted a gig on Fiverr on a Tuesday. Had my first paying client by Thursday. $740 in month 2. Not life changing but it proved the model worked. The secret nobody tells you: the AI does about 70% of the work. You do the other 30% — which is understanding what the client actually wants, editing for their voice, and delivering it like a professional. That 30% is why clients keep coming back. Month 3 — $1,560 This is where it got interesting. I kept the writing clients but added something new: no-code automation. Businesses will pay serious money to automate tasks that currently eat their team's time. I built a simple lead follow-up workflow for a local real estate agent using Zapier — took me one afternoon to learn and half a day to build. Charged $400. He loved it so much he put me on a $300/month retainer to maintain and expand it. I also finally got a digital product working. Built a Notion template for freelancers, priced it at $17 on Gumroad, mentioned it in a few relevant communities. It sold 23 copies that month without me touching it again. $391 while I slept. Total month 3: $1,560. Running total after 90 days: $2,300. What I learned that nobody posts about: The AI side hustles that actually pay all solve a specific problem for someone who has money and hates dealing with that problem themselves. Writing. Automation. Templates that save professionals time. These work. The ones that fail — AI art, video farms, prompt packs, faceless channels — all involve selling AI output directly to consumers who genuinely don't care where the content came from. Saturated, brutal, not worth your time. The other thing I learned is that the learning curve is the biggest barrier for most people. Not the tools — the tools are easy. It's knowing which skills to learn first, in what order, and how to package them so clients actually pay for them. That framework took me 3 months of trial and error to figure out. If I could go back I'd have found a structured starting point instead of winging it. Would have hit $2,300 in month one instead of month three. Anyway — happy to answer questions on any of this. What are you currently trying? For more in-depth insights and resources, see my bio;) submitted by /u/Michael_sidehustles to r/SideHustleGold [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Michael_sidehustles |
Mar 13, 2026 |
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AI tool OpenClaw wipes the inbox of Meta's AI Alignment director despite repeated commands to stop — executive had to manually terminate the AI to stop the bot from continuing to erase data
submitted by /u/NorCalAthlete to r/nottheonion [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
NorCalAthlete |
Feb 25, 2026 |
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Coding for 20+ years, here is my honest take on AI tools and the mindset shift
Since Nov 2022 I started using AI like most people. I tried every free model I could find from both the west and the east, just to see what the fuss was about. Last year I subscribed to Claude Pro, moved into the extra usage, and early this year upgraded to Claude Max 5x. Now I am even considering Max 20x. I use AI almost entirely for professional work, about 85% for coding. I've been coding for more than two decades, seen trends come and go, and know very well that coding with AI is not perfect yet, but nothing in this industry has matured this fast. I now feel like I've mastered how to code with AI and I'm loving it. At this point calling them "just tools" feels like an understatement. They're the line between staying relevant and falling behind. And, the mindset shift that comes with it is radical and people do not talk about it enough. It's not just about increased productivity or speed, but it’s about how you think about problems, how you architect solutions, and how you deliver on time, budget and with quality. We’re in a world of AI that is evolving fast in both scope and application. They are now indispensable if one wants to stay competitive and relevant. Whether people like it or not, and whether they accept it or not, we are all going through a radical mindset shift. Takeaway: If I can learn and adapt at my age, you too can (those in my age group)! submitted by /u/Jaded-Term-8614 to r/ClaudeAI [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Jaded-Term-8614 |
Feb 20, 2026 |
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Amazon blames human employees for an AI coding agent’s mistake / Two minor AWS outages have reportedly occurred as a result of actions by Amazon’s AI tools.
submitted by /u/MarvelsGrantMan136 to r/technology [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
MarvelsGrantMan136 |
Feb 20, 2026 |
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Shout-out to this amazing tool. Increased my FPS and now I don't get any game crashes. Ai ruins everything
submitted by /u/Few-Lynx6217 to r/pcmasterrace [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Few-Lynx6217 |
Feb 13, 2026 |
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Gaming market melts down after Google reveals new AI game design tool — Project Genie crashes stocks for Roblox, Nintendo, CD Projekt Red, and more
submitted by /u/Logical_Welder3467 to r/technology [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Logical_Welder3467 |
Feb 1, 2026 |
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UIM wipes 284M after being told by an AI tool that Perilous Moons is a safe death
submitted by /u/Derek_MK to r/2007scape [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Derek_MK |
Jan 26, 2026 |
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Steam updates AI disclosure form, requiring developers to report visible and in-game AI but not background tools
submitted by /u/Dapper_Order7182 to r/Steam [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Dapper_Order7182 |
Jan 17, 2026 |
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Larian CEO: “I know there’s been a lot of discussion about us using AI tools as part of concept art exploration… To ensure there is no room for doubt, we’ve decided to refrain from using genAI tools during concept art development.”
This new statement comes from their recent AMA Swen Vincke, Larian CEO: So first off - there is not going to be any GenAI art in Divinity. I know there’s been a lot of discussion about us using AI tools as part of concept art exploration. We already said this doesn’t mean the actual concept art is generated by AI but we understand it created confusion. So, to ensure there is no room for doubt, we’ve decided to refrain from using genAI tools during concept art development. That way there can be no discussion about the origin of the art. Having said that, we continuously try to improve the speed with which we can try things out. The more iterations we can do, the better in general the gameplay is. We think GenAI can help with this and so we’re trying things out across departments. Our hope is that it can aid us to refine ideas faster, leading to a more focused development cycle, less waste, and ultimately, a higher-quality game. The important bit to note is that we will not generate “creative assets” that end up in a game without being 100% sure about the origins of the training data and the consent of those who created the data. If we use a GenAI model to create in-game assets, then it’ll be trained on data we own. submitted by /u/AashyLarry to r/gaming [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
AashyLarry |
Jan 9, 2026 |
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Sony is trying to patent an AI tool that will censor what you see and hear in games automatically.
submitted by /u/Alternative_Crew_681 to r/gaming [link] [comments]
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reddit.com |
Alternative_Crew_681 |
Dec 20, 2025 |