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8 AI Tools That Caught My Attention This Week
The AI landscape is moving fast, but every now and then a few tools stand out because they solve real problems rather than adding more noise.
Here are 8 tools worth exploring:
1. Bond — The AI To-Do List That Does Itself
Most productivity apps help you organize work.
Bond goes a step further by acting like an AI Chief of Staff. It connects to your tools, learns how your company operates, surfaces priorities, and recommends the highest-leverage actions you should take next. Instead of managing tasks, it helps manage outcomes.
Best for:
• Founders
• Operators
• Startup teams
• Executives2. Publora — The Publishing API for the Agent Era
AI agents are increasingly creating content. Publora helps them publish it.
With a single API, agents can schedule and publish content across multiple social platforms, including LinkedIn, X, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, Bluesky, Mastodon, and Telegram. It is designed for AI-native content workflows and automation.
Best for:
• AI builders
• Content teams
• Marketing automation
• Personal branding3. Honen — Automated Learning Infrastructure
Corporate learning is often fragmented and difficult to scale.
Honen aims to automate teaching and learning within organizations by creating systems that continuously educate employees, track progress, and personalize learning experiences.
Best for:
• Learning & Development teams
• Employee onboarding
• Internal training
• Knowledge management4. VC Boom — Raise Capital Smarter
Fundraising is often a process filled with uncertainty.
VC Boom helps founders evaluate pitch decks, identify weaknesses, discover relevant investors, and improve fundraising outcomes through AI-powered analysis and recommendations.
Best for:
• Startup founders
• Early-stage companies
• Fundraising teams
• Accelerators5. Browse.sh — Give AI Agents Muscle Memory
AI agents can reason well, but many still struggle with browser-based workflows.
Browse.sh enables agents to learn, repeat, and automate actions across websites, creating reusable workflows that can execute tasks consistently and reliably.
Think of it as muscle memory for AI agents.
Best for:
• Web automation
• Operations teams
• AI agent builders
• Workflow automation6. TypingMind — The Power User’s AI Workspace
Instead of paying for multiple AI subscriptions, TypingMind provides a single interface for many leading AI models.
It supports providers such as OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Mistral, Cohere, DeepSeek, Groq, and others, while allowing users to pay directly for API usage.
Best for:
• AI enthusiasts
• Consultants
• Developers
• Multi-model workflows7. Asmi AI — AI That Handles Real-Life Chores
Most AI tools live inside your browser.
Asmi AI focuses on real-world execution by helping users manage appointments, coordinate services, handle errands, and complete administrative tasks.
Best for:
• Busy professionals
• Personal productivity
• Executive assistance
• Life administration8. Respawn Gateway — One Gateway for All Your AI
As organizations deploy more AI systems, observability and governance become increasingly important.
Respawn Gateway provides a centralized AI infrastructure layer with built-in monitoring, evaluation, tracing, and governance capabilities.
Best for:
• AI teams
• Enterprise deployments
• Model monitoring
• AI infrastructureThe biggest trend I see?
We’re moving from AI tools that generate content to AI systems that execute work.
The winners won’t be the companies using the most AI.
They’ll be the ones building the best AI-powered workflows.
Which of these tools would you try first?

