Every week, dozens of new AI tools launch. Most are forgettable. A few are genuinely useful. We track them all so you don't have to. Here are the new AI tools from this week that are actually worth knowing about.
Worth Trying
#### Sled — Voice Coding from Your Phone
Category: Coding | Price: Free (open source)
An open-source voice interface that lets you control desktop coding agents from your phone. Walk around your apartment while pair-programming with AI. Sounds gimmicky until you realize how much coding time is spent describing what you want — and your voice is faster than your keyboard for that.
Why it matters: Mobile-first development interfaces are a growing trend. Sled isn't replacing your IDE — it's adding a new input method for the parts of AI-assisted coding that are conversational.
Try if: You use AI coding tools heavily and want to work while not sitting at your desk.
#### Superdesign — AI UI Design for Non-Designers
Category: Design | Price: Freemium
Takes your description and generates production-ready UI designs that can export to code. Positioned for product managers and developers who need to create interfaces without waiting for a design team.
Why it matters: The gap between "I know what I want" and "I can design what I want" is where most products stall. If Superdesign's output is genuinely production-quality (jury's still out), this could collapse a week of design work into an afternoon.
Try if: You're a PM or developer who sketches UIs on napkins and wishes they magically became Figma files.
#### Kaily — AI That Joins Your Video Calls
Category: Chatbots / Support | Price: Paid (pricing varies)
A conversational AI agent that handles customer support and sales — including joining video calls. Takes the chatbot concept beyond text and into face-to-face interactions.
Why it matters: Video support is increasingly expected, especially for SaaS and high-touch products. An AI that handles initial video conversations could dramatically scale support teams.
Try if: Your customers expect video support and your team can't keep up.
Interesting but Unproven
#### Genstore.ai — AI-Built Storefronts
Category: Ecommerce | Price: Freemium
Generates entire ecommerce storefronts using AI — product pages, layouts, copy, the whole thing. Promises "storefront in minutes."
Our take: The generated stores look decent in demos. The question is whether the copy, SEO, and conversion optimization are actually good or just fast. Speed without quality is just fast failure. Worth watching, too early to recommend confidently.
#### CreateOS — Deploy from Any AI Coding Tool
Category: Development | Price: Freemium
A deployment platform that connects to AI coding tools — build in Cursor, Claude Code, or any AI agent, and deploy through CreateOS. Trying to be the bridge between "AI wrote the code" and "the code is live."
Our take: Solves a real friction point. AI-generated code often works locally but deploying it still requires traditional DevOps knowledge. If CreateOS handles the deployment complexity reliably, it fills an actual gap. The "from any AI coding tool" claim needs testing.
Skip This Week
"AI [thing you already have] but with AI" — This week saw launches of AI-powered to-do lists, AI-powered calculators, and an AI-powered alarm clock. If the core product existed fine before AI, adding a chatbot to it doesn't make it worth switching.
Another GPT wrapper with a landing page — At least three launches this week were thin interfaces on OpenAI's API with no meaningful differentiation. Check if the tool does anything ChatGPT can't before paying for it.
What We're Watching
Voice interfaces are having a moment. Sled for coding, several new voice-to-text tools, and voice-controlled productivity apps. The pattern: as AI gets better at understanding intent from natural speech, typing becomes the bottleneck.
AI video editing continues to improve. Descript and CapCut are setting the bar, and we're seeing new entrants try to undercut them on price with competitive quality. Expect this category to get crowded.
Vertical AI tools (real estate, legal, medical) are getting more sophisticated. Generic AI tools handle 80% of tasks. The 20% that requires domain expertise is where specialized tools are finding their market.
This Week by Numbers
- New tools tracked: 34
- Worth trying: 3
- Interesting but unproven: 2
- Skip: 29
That ratio is pretty typical. Most weeks, 80-90% of new launches don't clear our bar. We'll keep filtering so you don't have to.
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