Search the web with less noise and better results.
Use Kagi when default search feels too noisy.
Check if this matches what you need right now.
Look at price and setup together.
If you want to move quickly, this is a good first tool to try.
Best for research where result quality matters more than ad-heavy search pages.
Kagi helps you research with fewer distractions and more relevant results. It is a good companion for comparing tools, checking sources, and exploring a topic in depth.
A simple tool for research, discovery, and source-backed summaries.
A useful home for prompts, docs, and team knowledge.
Use Linear when your team wants clearer planning and execution.
A simple way to build app-to-app workflows fast.
A step-by-step way to organize discovery, source collection, and synthesis.
Do not ask whether the answer sounds confident. Ask whether it is sourced, current, and risky if wrong.
Choose by tool category, not by hype. The right first tool depends on whether you need one app shortcut, a visible multi-step flow, or smarter routing.
A good starter stack is small, easy to explain, and tied to a real weekly task instead of internet hype.
A plain-language guide to telling an AI agent apart from a normal chatbot, and deciding whether you need one now or later.
If you are still learning what AI is useful for, stay with finished apps. API choice only becomes relevant once AI has to fit inside your own system or repeat at scale.