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Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from March 7, 2026

SuperPowers AI introduced a tool that uses your phone's camera to let visual AI agents provide real-time assistance with physical and visual tasks like repairs or data analysis.

Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from March 7, 2026

Yesterday brought another wave of tools aiming to streamline how we work and interact with technology. For developers and tech-savvy teams looking for an edge, March 7th offered a particularly interesting mix, especially with several new developer tools launching that focus on AI integration and team collaboration.

SuperPowers AI

Imagine pointing your phone at a broken piece of furniture and having an AI instantly walk you through the repair steps, or looking at a complex graph during a meeting and getting an immediate summary. That’s the promise of SuperPowers AI. It puts what they’re calling “Claude-grade” visual agents right into your camera viewfinder, working in real-time to solve problems you encounter visually. The key here is the “ambient” nature of it; there’s no need to take a photo, upload it, and wait for a response. The analysis happens live.

This is firmly in the freemium category, which makes sense for a tool that needs widespread adoption to be truly useful. It’s designed for anyone who regularly encounters visual puzzles—think field technicians, students in a lab, or even DIY enthusiasts. The big question mark is how well it handles nuanced or low-light scenarios, but the potential to act as a real-time expert looking over your shoulder is undeniable. Learn more about SuperPowers AI.

Saydi

Language barriers in professional settings can be a significant drag on productivity and understanding. Saydi tackles this head-on as an AI voice translation platform built for dynamic conversations. Supporting over 60 languages with a focus on near-zero latency, it’s designed for meetings, events, and conferences where the flow of conversation can’t be interrupted by clunky translation delays.

The real test for a tool like this isn't just word-for-word accuracy, but its ability to preserve nuance, tone, and intent. If it can accurately convey sarcasm, hesitation, or enthusiasm across languages, it moves from being a simple utility to an indispensable communication bridge. Being freemium lowers the barrier for teams to try it out on their next international call. It feels like a logical and necessary evolution of translation tech, moving it from a pre-prepared script tool to a live participant. Check out Saydi.

Gemlet

For macOS power users who’ve grown accustomed to the capabilities of Google’s Gemini but don’t love context-switching to a browser tab, Gemlet presents an elegant solution. It’s a native menu bar application built with SwiftUI, meaning it feels fast and integrated with the macOS environment. The emphasis on global shortcuts and keyboard-first navigation is a clear nod to users for whom efficiency is paramount.

A significant benefit they highlight is the lack of an API key requirement, which simplifies the setup process considerably. This is a paid product, which suggests a focus on delivering a polished, reliable experience rather than chasing mass adoption through a free tier. It’s a very specific tool for a specific audience: if you live in Gemini and on a Mac, the convenience factor could be well worth the price. Explore Gemlet.

CoChat

As AI agents become more powerful, the challenge shifts from creating them to managing them securely within a team. CoChat enters the scene as an autonomous AI agent workspace that eliminates the need for complex self-hosting setups. It connects directly to your existing OpenClaw or KiloClaw instances, providing a centralized hub where team members can safely access and collaborate with these agents.

Features like security auditing and collaborative tools address real concerns about letting multiple people interact with powerful AI systems. This freemium model seems ideal for letting small teams pilot the concept before committing. The success of CoChat will likely hinge on how seamlessly it integrates with existing workflows and its ability to prevent one team member’s poorly crafted prompt from affecting another’s work. See how CoChat works.

Cushion

The world doesn’t need another Slack clone, and Cushion seems to understand that. It positions itself as an async messaging app specifically for small, distributed teams, with a focus on “purposeful communication.” This implies a design philosophy that prioritizes deep work and reduces the constant interruption of real-time chat.

The challenge for any new entrant in this space is overcoming the network effect of established platforms. Teams are hesitant to move away from where their conversations already live. Cushion’s angle seems to be that by being intentionally designed for small teams from the ground up, it can offer a calmer, more organized experience that larger platforms can’t replicate. It’s a freemium play, which is almost a requirement to get teams through the door. For teams truly struggling with notification fatigue and fragmented discussions, it might be worth a look. Learn about Cushion.


Quick Links to Yesterday's Launches