# AI Tools That Have Caught My Eye **Published by:** [☼ day---break](https://paragraph.com/@day---break/) **Published on:** 2024-11-12 **Categories:** ai, ai-tools, chat, generative **URL:** https://paragraph.com/@day---break/ai-tools-that-have-caught-my-eye ## Content I keep getting asked about which AI tools are actually useful, especially from friends and family trying to make sense of all the hype. So here's my running list of what's worth checking out right now.Chat AssistantsChatGPTMy go-to for first drafts and problem-solving. Free tier works fine, but I spend enough time in it that paying for GPT-4 made sense.ClaudeBetter at handling longer texts than ChatGPT. Really good at making AI-generated text sound human. The free version is solid.JanRuns on your own computer instead of the cloud. Needs decent hardware, but worth it if you care about privacy or need to work offline.GrokNew kid on the block. Has real-time knowledge which is neat, though still finding its groove.Generative PlatformsMidjourneyYeah, you have to use Discord. Yeah, it's weird at first. But it makes the most beautiful images of any AI I've tried. Seriously addictive once you get the hang of it.DALL·EEasier to use than Midjourney. Better for realistic stuff. Sometimes that's all you need.FluxNew but promising. Actually follows your prompts without needing to play the "guess what the AI wants" game.RunwayThey're doing cool things with video. Type what you want, get a video clip back. Still rough around the edges but wild when it works.API & DevelopmentTogether AIFast inference, good fine-tuning options. Solid if you're building AI into your apps.fal.aiGreat for real-time media processing. Their API is actually pleasant to work with.ReplicateMakes it dead simple to use open source AI models. Good pricing model too.Mystic.aiEnterprise-focused deployment. Multi-cloud support if that's your thing.Hugging FaceWhere you go to find AI models. Massive community. Their Transformers library is everywhere for a reason.Additional ToolsLangflowVisual builder for AI workflows. Nice if you want to chain stuff together without coding.GumloopHosted automation for AI workflows. Set it up once and let it run.NotebookLMGoogle's take on AI documents. Good at connecting dots across lots of text.LexWriting editor with AI-powered polish. Great checks for brevity, confidence, passive voice, and grammar. Makes final cleanup a breeze.Making Tools Work TogetherHere's a workflow I use regularly: I have a custom ChatGPT setup that formats recipes - whether from blog links, text dumps, or just ingredients and a target outcome. ChatGPT does the heavy lifting of structuring everything, but the writing comes out robotic. So I feed that through Claude, telling it specifically to remove the AI voice. Then it's over to Lex for final polish - its checks for brevity, confidence, passive voice, and grammar clean everything up nicely.What I've LearnedStart simple. Get comfortable with one tool before adding others.Don't pay until you know you'll use it enough.Everything needs cleanup - these aren't magic.Save prompts that work well.For dev stuff, use hosted before self-hosting.I keep finding new uses for these tools as they evolve. I'll update this when I find something worth adding. ## Publication Information - [☼ day---break](https://paragraph.com/@day---break/): Publication homepage - [All Posts](https://paragraph.com/@day---break/): More posts from this publication - [RSS Feed](https://api.paragraph.com/blogs/rss/@day---break): Subscribe to updates - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/day_____break): Follow on Twitter ## Optional - [Collect as NFT](https://paragraph.com/@day---break/ai-tools-that-have-caught-my-eye): Support the author by collecting this post - [View Collectors](https://paragraph.com/@day---break/ai-tools-that-have-caught-my-eye/collectors): See who has collected this post