
What's great
ChatPDF is extremely useful when dealing with long or complex PDF files. I regularly use it to ask targeted questions, summarize key sections, and quickly locate specific information in research papers and contracts. The ability to get instant, context-aware answers without manually searching saves a significant amount of time. It’s especially valuable for students and professionals who need fast insights from dense documents.
What's great
FuseBase does an excellent job of unifying internal and external collaboration in one clean workspace. The biggest standout is how the AI agents are embedded directly into projects — they handle routine admin tasks like organizing content, summarizing discussions, and keeping workspaces up to date, which genuinely saves time.
The no-code setup makes it easy to build client portals and internal hubs without relying on engineering, and the separation between internal spaces and external-facing portals is well thought out. I also found the browser extension and automation hub especially useful for capturing information and connecting workflows across tools.
While there’s a bit of a learning curve compared to simpler tools, FuseBase clearly shines for teams managing both internal work and client collaboration. Overall, it’s a powerful alternative to Notion, purpose-built for real operational workflows rather than just documentation.

What's great
Fantastic listening experience with smart features
Spotify continues to be my favorite music and podcast app because of how well it learns my tastes. The Discover Weekly and Release Radar playlists are consistently accurate, and the Daily Mixes make it easy to find the right vibe without searching. I also love the cross-device syncing — starting a playlist on my phone and instantly controlling it from my laptop or speaker is seamless. Podcasts are organized well, and the offline download feature works perfectly when I’m traveling.
A polished, reliable experience all around.
How accurate are Spotify’s personalized playlists for you?
On a good week, I’d say 40–60% of the songs on my Discover Weekly or Daily Mix I genuinely like and save/listen to on repeat.
Another 20–30% might be “interesting” — not exactly my core taste, but good enough to leave on or explore.




