This video by the presenters (the host and Corey) covers a weekly roundup of AI tools and apps, from a Chrome extension that kills Amazon knockoffs to a local desktop AI and a screen recorder that builds a company brain.
🛑 Knockoff – A Chrome plugin by Josh Pigford that hides fake products and sponsored posts on Amazon. Huge demand—viewers resonate with the pain of buying cheap knockoffs that break.
🎤 Clicky (Farsza) – A dictation app that reads your screen and context, not just your words. You say “reply to this email” and it drafts a personalized response in your voice, bypassing word‑for‑word dictation.
🔍 Just Vibe – A search engine that generates a full web app from a plain‑English prompt (e.g., “plan a Tokyo trip”). One‑shot results are rough but iterable; potential for deeper itineraries.
🛠️ Social CLI – A command‑line interface for LinkedIn and X, built for agents. Scrapes engagement data, allowing automated outreach to people who engage with your posts—putting some ghostwriting agencies on notice.
🖼️ Mangtoe’s Infinite Canvas – An endless design canvas inside Codex. High‑quality, one‑shot outputs for landing pages, images, and content—great for visual creators.
🎬 Scene Roll (by Jason Zuk) – Edits short‑form videos by prompting you to record B‑roll once, then AI inserts those clips automatically into future videos. Solves the pain of B‑roll management.
🧠Printing Press (by Matt Van Horn) – Creates CLI interfaces for any website. New self‑learning update: agents leave notes, cutting token calls from 10 to 2. Community library includes a Facebook Marketplace responder.
🧰 Maker Skills (by Corey Haynes) – A free, open‑source skill pack for agents (e.g., “decide,” “watch video,” “CFO workflow”). Allows Claude/GPT to watch videos, extract transcripts, and run business processes.
🔌 Plug – A vibe‑coding platform for Chrome extensions. Connects to Supabase and AI. Quick, portable, but faces competition from general‑purpose tools like Lovable.
🤖 Osaurus – A user‑friendly desktop app for running open‑source AI models. One‑click install, checks system compatibility, recommends the right model. Makes local AI accessible to non‑technical users.
📹 Screenpipe – Always‑running recorder that watches everything you do on desktop. Builds a “company brain,” auto‑identifies repetitive workflows, and spawns agents. Potent but raises privacy concerns—what gets stored?
Final Takeaway – This week’s drops show a clear trend: AI is moving from generic chat to specialized, contextual tools that augment real workflows. The winners address friction (knockoffs, dictation, B‑roll) or democratize access (local models, CLI makers). For power users, combining these tools can automate repetitive tasks, but trust and data control remain critical questions.