Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from February 20, 2026
Glimmer introduces a design system tailored for transparent displays on emerging devices like AI glasses.
Yesterday brought another interesting mix of tools to the tech landscape, with several launches focusing on simplifying complex tasks. From interface design for the next generation of hardware to automating everyday digital chores, these new developer tools and productivity aids hint at where practical innovation is heading. Let’s break down what landed on February 20th.
Glimmer
Glimmer tackles one of the more futuristic challenges in tech: how to design interfaces for transparent displays. As AI glasses slowly move from concept to reality, the standard rules of UI design on opaque screens no longer apply. Glimmer is a complete design system built from the ground up for this new medium. It rethinks fundamental UI physics, prioritizing what the team calls "glanceability," ensuring information is digestible in a moment, and designing for an arm's-length focus instead of something held close. It also incorporates ambient motion principles, suggesting interfaces that feel alive and context-aware without being distracting.
For designers and developers prototyping experiences for augmented reality glasses, this is a significant resource. The fact that it’s free lowers the barrier to entry for experimenting in a space that is still being defined. The main question mark is the hardware platform itself; widespread adoption of consumer-grade transparent displays is still on the horizon. But for those building the future, having a thoughtful starting point is invaluable.
AppIcon Studio - Icons in seconds
If you’ve ever published a mobile app, you know the surprisingly tedious process of generating all the required icon sizes and assets for iOS and Android. AppIcon Studio aims to remove that friction entirely. The premise is straightforward: you upload a base image, use their tools to adjust it, and the service exports a complete package with every resolution needed for the App Store and Google Play.
This is a classic example of a tool that solves a specific, recurring pain point for developers and indie creators. It saves time and eliminates the potential for human error in resizing. While similar utilities exist, a free and seemingly streamlined option is always welcome. Its success will likely hinge on the quality and flexibility of its customization tools. If it’s truly intuitive and produces sharp results, it could become a go-to in many development workflows.
Origami.chat
Sales teams are perpetually on the lookout for tools that can trim down the time between finding a lead and closing a deal. Origami.chat enters this crowded space with an AI-powered approach to sales workflows. It promises to help teams build targeted prospect lists, enrich that data with relevant information, and ultimately accelerate the sales cycle.
The "freemium" model suggests there’s a free tier to get started, which is smart for enticing teams to try it out without a commitment. The key differentiator will be the intelligence of its AI. There are many CRM and prospecting tools available; Origami.chat needs to demonstrate that its automated workflows are genuinely smarter and more effective than manual methods or existing solutions. For a small sales team feeling overwhelmed by lead generation, it might be worth a look.
Kollect Voice Agent
Forms are a necessary evil of the digital world, but they’re often a source of user frustration. Kollect Voice Agent offers a compelling alternative: turning static forms into dynamic, conversational experiences. Instead of clicking through fields, users speak their responses naturally. An AI listens, understands the context, and guides them through the survey with relevant follow-up questions in real-time.
What makes Kollect particularly interesting is that it’s open-source and self-hostable. This gives organizations full control over their data, a critical feature for handling sensitive information. The ability to create a form simply by describing it is a powerful low-code/no-code feature. Built with TypeScript, it should be accessible for many developers to extend or customize. This feels like a genuinely innovative take on data collection that could make surveys, applications, and feedback forms much less painful for everyone involved.
Feedix
The volume of video content published daily is overwhelming. For busy professionals who subscribe to informative YouTube channels, it’s impossible to keep up. Feedix addresses this by acting as a personal curator and summarizer. It connects to your YouTube subscriptions, uses AI to summarize new videos, and delivers those concise digests directly to your inbox.
The value proposition here is pure time-saving. Instead of watching a 45-minute tech talk, you might get the key takeaways in a three-minute read. The obvious caveat is that a summary can’t capture every nuance, joke, or visual demonstration. But for staying broadly informed on topics you care about, it’s a clever solution. The success of such a service depends entirely on the quality and accuracy of its AI summaries. If it can consistently distill content without losing crucial meaning, it could be a game-changer for lifelong learners with packed schedules.
None of these products had community rankings available at launch, so it’s a clean slate for early adopters to try them out and see what sticks. Each one targets a distinct problem, from the futuristic interface challenges of Glimmer to the immediate time-saving potential of Feedix.
Quick Links to Yesterday's Launches: