Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from January 25, 2026
New AI tool GetThis organizes voice memos and screenshots into categorized lists automatically.
Yesterday brought another wave of interesting tools aimed at simplifying complex workflows, particularly for developers and creators looking to automate repetitive tasks. From organizing thoughts to generating content, these new developer tools focus on leveraging AI to handle the grunt work. Let's take a closer look at what launched.
GetThis
If you've ever found yourself with a jumble of voice memos and screenshots that you swear you'll organize later, GetThis might be the app that finally breaks the cycle. The core idea is straightforward: instead of manually transcribing your scattered thoughts, you let the AI do the heavy lifting. You feed it your audio clips or pictures of notes, and it returns neatly categorized lists, whether that's a grocery list sorted by aisle or a project task list broken down into actionable steps.
It's positioned as a freemium service, which is a sensible approach for a utility like this. People need to experience the convenience before committing. The real test will be whether the AI's parsing is accurate enough to trust for important lists. Misplacing "buy milk" under "urgent work emails" could be frustrating. But for anyone who lives out of their phone's notes app and camera roll, the potential time savings are significant. It's available on both web and mobile, making it accessible wherever inspiration—or forgetfulness—strikes.
BananaX
Visual content tends to grab more attention on social media, but creating graphics can be a major bottleneck. BananaX tackles this by turning the text from your X posts into infographics instantly. As a free Chrome extension, it integrates directly into your browsing experience. You write your post as usual, and with one click, it uses Google's Gemini AI to generate a styled image from your words.
This is a clever tool for content creators, marketers, or anyone wanting to make their social presence more visually engaging without learning design software. The "one-click" promise is appealing, though the quality and customization of the resulting graphics will be the key factor. Does it produce genuinely "stunning" visuals, or just generic templates with your text slapped on top? For a free tool, even the latter might be good enough for daily use, saving a trip to Canva or another design platform.
PainPoints.fast
For founders and product managers, one of the biggest challenges is validating a new idea. Are you solving a problem people actually have? PainPoints.fast attempts to answer that by scraping data from public forums like Reddit, X, and review sites to find recurring complaints. It analyzes conversations to highlight not just common pain points, but also the urgency behind them and even hints at a willingness to pay.
This kind of market intelligence can be incredibly valuable, moving beyond gut feelings to data-driven insights. The freemium model makes it easy to dip a toe in and see what the tool surfaces for your niche. A potential limitation is the depth of analysis. Understanding nuance and context in online rants can be tricky for algorithms. It might tell you that people are frustrated with "customer service," but distinguishing between a need for faster responses versus more knowledgeable agents requires a deeper layer of comprehension. Still, as a starting point for idea validation, it seems like a powerful resource.
Pixelora
Imagine a digital whiteboard that expands infinitely in every direction, where instead of drawing, you describe what you want to see and an AI brings it to life. That's the premise of Pixelora. It’s designed for designers, marketers, and creators who need to brainstorm and iterate on visual concepts quickly. The ability to pan and zoom across a single, growing scene could be a game-changer for projects like storyboarding, mood board creation, or designing complex user interface flows.
The promise is to move away from managing dozens of static image files. Instead, you have one living canvas. The success of this will hinge entirely on the power and flexibility of its AI image generation. Can it maintain stylistic consistency as you zoom into different areas? How well does it interpret more abstract descriptions? As a freemium web app, it's poised to attract curious creatives. If the execution matches the vision, it could become a central hub for visual ideation.
SeoPilot
Maintaining a consistent blog for SEO is a well-known growth strategy, but it's also a massive time sink for busy product owners. SeoPilot aims to automate the entire process: writing SEO-optimized posts, generating accompanying images, and handling the publishing schedule. The goal is to build organic traffic passively while you focus on building the actual product.
This is a purely paid tool, which suggests it's targeting a more serious, business-oriented user who sees content as a direct channel for growth. The all-in-one nature is its biggest selling point. However, the quality of AI-generated content is a hot topic. Can SeoPilot produce articles that are genuinely valuable to readers and not just keyword-stuffed filler that search engines might eventually penalize? The inclusion of an API is a nice touch for teams that want to integrate content automation into their own workflows. For those who view blogging as a necessary but tedious task, the automation could be worth the investment.
Quick Links
For more details, you can check out each product directly: