📂 Browse by Category
Writing Tools
Jasper, Copy.ai, Writesonic, Notion AI... Generate articles, rewrite copy, and optimize for SEO — all in one place.
View All 💻 AI CodingCoding Assistants
Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Cody, Windsurf... AI pair programmers for code completion, bug fixes, and automated refactoring.
View All 🎨 AI ImageImage Generation
Midjourney, DALL·E, Stable Diffusion, Leonardo... Text-to-image, image-to-image, and style transfer tools.
View All ⚡ AI ProductivityProductivity Tools
Gamma, Tome, Fireflies, Otter.ai... AI-driven workflow automation, meeting notes, and presentation generators.
View All🔥 Top Picks
ChatGPT (GPT-4o)
ChatGPT is the most widely used AI writing tool. The GPT-4o model excels in writing, coding...
Cursor
Cursor is built on VS Code but nearly redefines the AI coding experience. Tab completion...
Claude (Sonnet 4.6)
Claude's killer feature is the 200K ultra-long context window — you can drop in entire...
Cody (Sourcegraph)
Cody's differentiator is Sourcegraph's code graph technology. Unlike other AI coding...
Copy.ai
Copy.ai's differentiator is the Workflow Builder — you can chain multiple AI steps into...
DALL·E 3
DALL·E 3's biggest advantage is text comprehension — give it a complex scene description...
📊 AI Tool Comparison
| Tool | Category | Free Tier | Starting Price | Rating | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jasper AI | Writing | ✅ | $49/mo | ★★★★★ | Marketing teams |
| Cursor | Coding | ✅ | $20/mo | ★★★★★ | Solo developers |
| Midjourney | Image | ❌ | $10/mo | ★★★★★ | Designers & creators |
| Copy.ai | Writing | ✅ | $36/mo | ★★★★☆ | Freelancers |
| GitHub Copilot | Coding | ✅ | $10/mo | ★★★★★ | All developers |
| DALL·E 3 | Image | Partial | $20/mo | ★★★★☆ | ChatGPT Plus users |
| Notion AI | Productivity | ❌ | $10/mo | ★★★★☆ | Notion users |
| Gamma | Productivity | ✅ | $8/mo | ★★★★☆ | Professionals |
Why Throwing the Same AI at Every Problem Is Burning Your Time
I see this pattern constantly: someone discovers ChatGPT or Claude, gets blown away by what it can do, and then tries to use it for everything. Writing code? Same AI. Writing marketing copy? Same AI. Summarizing a 50-page PDF? Same AI. A month later they're frustrated and telling people "AI is overhyped." The tool isn't the problem — the expectations are. Different tasks need different tools, and the gap between "good enough" and "actually great" is wider than most people realize.
AI Tool Categories That Actually Make Sense
The AI tool landscape has settled into some clear categories, and understanding them saves you from buying the wrong thing. Here's how I break it down after testing dozens of these tools:
General-purpose chatbots (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini) are your Swiss Army knives. They write, code, analyze, brainstorm — but they're generalists. They won't beat a specialized tool at a specialized task. Use them for exploration, drafting, and tasks where "pretty good" is good enough.
AI coding assistants (Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Cody) are fundamentally different from chatbots. They understand your codebase, complete lines in context, and operate inside your editor. A general chatbot can write a Python script for you; a coding assistant can refactor your entire codebase across 40 files without breaking anything. Different league.
AI image generators (Midjourney, DALL·E, Stable Diffusion) are their own world entirely. Prompting an image model requires a completely different mental model than prompting a text model. You need to think in visual concepts — lighting, composition, style references, aspect ratios — not paragraphs of reasoning. This is why throwing a text chatbot at an image task (or vice versa) gives you garbage.
AI productivity tools (Gamma for presentations, Fireflies for meeting notes, Notion AI for docs) are narrow but deep. They do one thing and do it well. Gamma builds a slide deck in 30 seconds that would take you two hours in PowerPoint. Fireflies transcribes and summarizes a meeting so you can actually pay attention during it. These aren't replacements for general AI — they're purpose-built layers on top of it.
The 5 Questions I Ask Before Picking Any AI Tool
After wasting money on subscriptions I didn't need, I settled on five criteria. Run any AI tool through this filter before you pull out your credit card:
1. Price vs actual usage. A $20/month tool you use twice a week costs $2.50 per use. A $49/month tool you use every day costs $1.63 per use. Don't look at the sticker price — calculate your per-use cost. And check whether the free tier actually covers your needs. Many tools have generous free plans that 80% of users never outgrow.
2. Privacy and data handling. Read the data policy, not just the privacy page. Does the tool train on your inputs? Can you opt out? If you're feeding it client contracts, internal code, or customer data, this matters. Some tools let you turn off training data collection; others don't. Enterprise plans usually offer better privacy guarantees than consumer plans.
3. Speed and reliability. A tool that generates brilliant output but takes 45 seconds per response is useless when you're in flow. Test response times during your trial period — especially during US business hours when servers are under load. Also check their status page history. Some tools go down weekly; others have near-perfect uptime.
4. Output quality for YOUR specific use case. Don't trust benchmarks — they test generic tasks. Test the tool on exactly what you'll use it for. A coding assistant that's great at Python might be terrible at Rust. An image generator that nails photorealism might struggle with logos. Run your actual prompts through it before deciding.
5. Ease of use and integration. The best tool in the world is worthless if you won't actually open it. Does it fit into your workflow or does it require you to build a new workflow around it? The tools that stick are the ones that meet you where you already are — inside your editor, your browser, your existing stack.
AI Tools in 2026: What's Actually Changing
The hype cycle has cooled, which is actually a good thing. The tools that survived are getting better in boring but important ways. Here's what I'm seeing:
Context windows are getting enormous. Claude now handles 200K tokens — that's roughly a 500-page book in a single prompt. Gemini has hit 2 million tokens. This changes what's possible: you can drop in entire codebases, full legal documents, complete research papers and ask questions across the whole thing. The bottleneck is no longer "will it fit" — it's "can the model actually pay attention to all of it."
Agent-style tools are maturing. The buzzword of 2025 was "AI agents" — tools that don't just answer questions but actually do things: browse the web, run code, send emails, interact with APIs. In 2026, this is becoming practical rather than theoretical. Claude Code, Cursor Agent, and Devin can now complete multi-step tasks (debug a bug across files, write tests, deploy a fix) with reasonable reliability. Not perfect — but good enough to save real hours.
Price compression is real. A year ago, the best models cost $20/month minimum. Now DeepSeek offers comparable quality for free or pennies per use, open-source models like Llama 4 run on consumer hardware, and the major players keep cutting prices. The cost of accessing top-tier AI is dropping fast. Don't lock yourself into expensive annual plans when cheaper alternatives might catch up in six months.
Multimodal is the new baseline. A year ago, "multimodal" was a feature. Now it's table stakes. Every major model handles text, images, audio, and increasingly video. Claude can read and analyze screenshots. ChatGPT can generate and edit images inline. Gemini processes video directly. If a tool can't handle images in 2026, it's behind.
The bottom line on AI tools right now: the gap between the best tool for a specific job and a generic tool for any job is massive. Use general chatbots for exploration and quick tasks. Use specialized tools for your core workflows. And revisit your stack every few months — this space moves fast, and what was best in January might not be best in June.