
The AI Slop Backlash Is Good News for Creators
Cheap AI output is everywhere. The backlash from readers, artists, and listeners is forcing creative tools to compete on taste, trust, and ownership…
Pluck is an AI-native Chrome extension that lets developers and designers capture UI components from any website and recreate them instantly inside tools like Figma, Claude, Cursor, Lovable, Bolt, and v0. Instead of manually inspecting HTML, copying styles, and rebuilding layouts from scratch, users can click a live element and preserve its structure, spacing, colors, fonts, assets, and layout context in one step. That makes Pluck especially useful for rapid prototyping, design inspiration, and speeding up front-end workflows when working with AI coding assistants. With free and paid plans, universal compatibility across popular builder tools, and a browser-first workflow, Pluck helps teams go from visual reference to production-ready output much faster while reducing tedious UI recreation work.
Reader rating
No ratings yet
You might also like
Ogcode is an agentic coding assistant with a web UI, written in Go, that can understand a codebase, plan work with the user, create branches and open pull requests. Its Build Mode lets an agent read, edit and execute code directly, while Plan Mode decomposes larger features or refactors into branch-based tasks that can run in parallel. The tool is for developers who want a more visual, collaborative alternative to terminal-only coding agents. It solves the workflow gap between planning and implementation by keeping tasks, branches and PR creation in one loop. It is notable now because parallel branch agents are becoming a serious way to ship multi-part features faster.
Fabrica is a terminal-based coding agent written in Rust with an interactive TUI, streaming conversation log, in-app model picker, and autonomous file and shell tools. The official README lists multi-provider support for Gemini, Claude, and OpenAI models, plus an agentic loop that can plan and execute multi-step tasks using tool calls until the job is done. It is useful for developers who want a lightweight, hackable coding-agent client outside a full IDE, especially when comparing providers or working in terminal-first environments. Fabrica is notable now because the coding-agent ecosystem is diversifying beyond proprietary editors, and many users want local, transparent tools that can be installed from source or crates.io.
Codex CLI is OpenAI’s terminal-based coding agent that helps developers read, edit, run, and iterate on code directly from the command line. Instead of limiting AI assistance to a browser chat or IDE sidebar, it brings coding workflows into a local terminal environment where users can work faster on implementation, debugging, and multi-step software tasks. The tool is especially useful for developers who prefer command-line workflows, operate across repositories, or want an agent that can act on code in context rather than only suggest snippets. Codex CLI stands out by combining OpenAI’s coding system with a practical local execution model that fits real development habits. For engineers evaluating AI coding assistants beyond autocomplete, Codex CLI is a meaningful addition to the fast-growing category of agentic developer tools.
From the blog

Cheap AI output is everywhere. The backlash from readers, artists, and listeners is forcing creative tools to compete on taste, trust, and ownership…

Cursor SDK and Claude connectors show why useful AI products need runtimes, rails, workflow access, and cost controls…

5 Wild Use Cases For GPT Image 2 The Next Leap in AI Image Generation and Where the Future is Heading Usually, I create lead images for my stories manually in Photoshop, using a template I've …