Fotor is a browser-based photo editor with AI tools for quick visual jobs: product shots, background/object removal, image enhancement, AI image generation, social graphics and collages.
@fotor_com
NoimosAI @noimos_ai is an AI marketing workspace that helps plan campaigns, generate content, manage tasks, and connect different marketing tools in one place.
#aitools
Most business data questions take 45 minutes to answer because someone has to find it, format it, and send it.
@Adapt connects to your tools and answers in Slack in 1 minute.
https://t.co/k37YGvb3zz
Novamira gives AI agents direct access to a real WordPress environment: PHP, WP-CLI, database queries, and file edits.
Great for developers working on staging sites, especially if you’re tired of copying logs and code back and forth. https://t.co/KYMcqGOgLy
Google’s latest redesign replaces ranked links with a generative AI interface designed to keep you on the page. This is zero-click search: Google strips the information from web creators, serves it as its own product surface, and hoards the traffic.
https://t.co/fDBg6VshKp
OpenAI is adding beta self-serve buying, CPC bidding, and conversion measurement.
Useful if you want to test high-intent ChatGPT traffic without buying pure impressions. Still early, but worth watching.
.@tryclico is for people who write across Gmail, Docs, Notion, Slack, and Reddit.
It puts AI inside the text box, reads the visible page for context, and can summarize pages, explain highlights, or take voice input.
Less tab-hopping. More writing.
https://t.co/Hg2C4T6M74
.@atoms_dev is useful when you want to test a paid app idea without spending weeks wiring the boring parts.
Research, spec, full-stack build, login, database, Stripe, hosting, SEO pages, and code export.
Good for indie hackers who need a real market test, not another mockup.
My inbox used to be filled with "submissions" to the directory for new, undeveloped, spammy tools.
Some AI slop tool called Polsia seems to be behind it. Trying to bypass the submission form.
This bot-driven sludge is marked as spam and deleted.
Polsia spelled backwards is...
Supernormal is positioning itself less as a note-taker and more as a post-meeting workflow tool. Calls turn into decks, briefs, and client updates, not just transcripts. The bot-free recording setup is great for agency environments, from @supernormal_ai.
https://t.co/FBXHxAQWuR
Shopify just gave AI tools an official way into merchant workflows: docs, API schemas, validation, and store actions. If you sell to ecommerce brands, test a "store operator" bot for catalog fixes, discount setup, and support tasks now. https://t.co/EFkEayVdhH
GPT for Work @gptforwork puts models like ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Grok inside Google Sheets and Excel. It’s built for bulk work: translation, categorization, enrichment across large datasets (up to ~1,000 rows per minute).
https://t.co/XiEY32zDU2
AI business idea 💡
Turn Gemma 4 into offline-first assistants for specific industries like warehouses, clinics, schools, field sales, or hospitality where privacy and speed matter more than having the most advanced model.
ElevenLabs’ Flows focuses on making creative production repeatable: build a pipeline once, then reuse it across product ads, voiceovers, lip-synced promos, and localized versions.
Create a standardized way of producing creative at scale.
@ElevenLabs
https://t.co/wbhFy23H6v
Hugging Face’s latest data is a good margin check for AI startups: smaller and open models keep winning on deployability and cost. If every request in your product still hits a frontier model, re-run the unit economics.
@huggingface
https://t.co/2Km853z5gp
💡AI business idea:
Audit ecommerce stores' product catalogs and pages to check how ready they are for AI search and discovery.
Then, offer services to clean up their product data feeds, automatically generate comparison tables, and enrich their product information.
Runway Builders is worth a look if your product could benefit from a face: onboarding host, support avatar, AI tutor, sales rep, or creator persona. Up to 500k API credits = test video agents before you take on full multimodal infra costs.
@runwayml
https://t.co/6t0aOFwS6P
I mapped every AI automation opportunity across 25 industries.
10-15 pain points each. With the exact positioning, pricing range, and who to sell to.
This took me 4 years and 80+ client engagements to figure out.
A lot of AI agencies pick a niche and pray.
They don't know the actual pain points.
They don't know who the buyer is.
They don't know what these companies are already paying for broken solutions.
They don't know what the realistic project size is.
So they end up competing on price for generic "AI automation" gigs.
I've worked with marketing agencies, recruiting firms, e-commerce brands, law firms, real estate companies, healthcare practices, financial services, SaaS companies, manufacturing, construction, logistics, and more.
Every single one has 10-15 processes that are bleeding money because they're still done manually.
Here's what the guide covers for each industry:
→ The top 10-15 automation pain points (ranked by ROI)
→ Who the actual buyer is (CEO, COO, ops manager, etc.)
→ What they're currently paying for manual labor or broken SaaS
→ Realistic project pricing ($5K-$60K+ depending on scope)
→ The discovery questions that unlock the deal
→ How to position yourself as the expert even if you've never worked in that industry
→ Red flags to avoid (industries and company sizes that aren't worth it)
25 industries and 300+ specific automation opportunities.
This is the cheat code for picking your niche and knowing exactly what to sell before you ever get on a call.
Like + RT + reply "NICHE" and I'll send you the full guide (Must be following so I can DM)