Weird Web Tools

Weird web tools that do one job well.

A curated list — every tool here was tried by a real human before being posted. Sites with obtrusive ads, or without at least a free demo, get rejected.

8 tools

Subhive

1

Every subscription in one dashboard: track spending across currencies, see your monthly total, and get renewal reminders before the surprise charge. Auto-detects subscriptions from Gmail or takes manual entries.

nxt

2

Talk to your to-do list. Speak a brain-dump and it extracts the tasks, infers priorities, and hands you one next action at a time with its reasoning — instead of a guilt-inducing wall of checkboxes.

Oakamo

3

Save articles from anywhere and read them later in a clean, distraction-free reader — highlights, a personal library, and listen-on-the-go included. Free.

Paste a job posting and it searches your Gmail, LinkedIn, and friends' networks to find who can actually refer you — mapping first- and second-degree paths to a warm intro. Free.

A private digital baby book: photos, videos, voice memos, and notes on a calendar, from pregnancy onward. First month free, then pay once — no subscription, ever.

PaidProductivityjojodays.com

Tally

0

A form builder that works like a text document: type your questions, add logic, share the link. The free tier includes unlimited forms and responses, which is rare in this space.

Small AI helpers built for neurodivergent brains: break an overwhelming task into steps with Magic ToDo, judge the tone of a message, or turn brain-dump text into a tidy list.

mymind

2

A private visual inbox for everything you want to remember — articles, images, quotes, products. AI tags it all and finds it later; no folders, no sharing, no feeds. Paid, with a free trial.