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.
- ✓ Curated by hand, not scraped
- ✓ Tried by a real human first
- ✓ No obtrusive ads
- ✓ Free demo at minimum
18 tools matching “ai”
An infinitely zooming collaborative painting that never stops falling inward. Dozens of artists stitched their work into one seamless, hypnotic descent. Full-screen it, put on music, lose track of time.
Generate a disposable inbox that receives real email instantly and disappears when you're done. No registration — open it, use it, burn it.
Paste a domain and get an email-deliverability health verdict: DNS records, SPF/DKIM/DMARC authentication, and blacklist signals — in the browser, no signup, no mailbox access, no test sends.
A full image editor in your browser that opens PSD, XCF, Sketch, and RAW files. The interface mirrors Photoshop closely enough that muscle memory just works. Free to use; a paid tier removes the sidebar ad.
Type a cron expression and see it translated into plain English, with the next scheduled runs. The fastest way to double-check that '0 4 * * 2' means what you think it means.
Move your mouse, wait a beat, and a stranger in a photo points exactly at your cursor. That's it. That's the site. Somehow it never stops being funny.
A hypnotic animated globe of live wind, ocean currents, and air quality, rendered from real forecast data. Drag to spin, scroll to zoom, and lose ten minutes watching the planet breathe.
Machine translation that consistently reads more naturally than the big-name alternatives, especially between European languages. Free in the browser for everyday use; paid plans lift the limits.
Enter your email address and see every known data breach it has appeared in. Run by security researcher Troy Hunt. Sobering, free, and worth checking twice a year.
Drag in an image, pick a codec, and slide the split-screen divider to compare quality against file size in real time. Compression runs locally in your browser — files never leave your machine.
Upload a song and AI splits it into vocals and instrumental in about a minute. Also pitch-shifts, changes tempo, and cuts ringtones. Free, no account required.
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.
Send files up to 2 GB free without creating an account: upload, get a link, share it. Paid plans add bigger transfers, storage, and password protection.
Sculpt a tiny glass aquarium: add algae, fish, and snails, then watch a self-sustaining ecosystem tick along pixel by pixel. From the maker of Sandspiel. Quietly mesmerizing.
Mix rain, thunder, waves, crackling fire, and café murmur into your own ambient background. Simple sliders, no account, endless calm.
Dozens of finely tuned soundscapes — rain, white noise, Gregorian chants, distant thunder — each with sliders to shape the mix to your ears. Built by an acoustics engineer; free, donation-supported.
Refresh the page and an AI dreams up a photorealistic face of someone who has never existed. The original demo that made the whole internet do a double-take. Free, no account, endlessly unsettling.
Ask a question, get a direct answer with numbered citations to real sources — a search engine that reads the results for you. Works without an account; power features are paid.