Day 7
Practical Tools AI Tools Landscape: What's Out There
A practical guide to the AI tools that actually work — organized by what you need to do, not what's trending.
BrainGem · braingem.ai/learn
I've tried basically all of these so you don't have to — here's what actually works, organized by what you need to do. Not what's trending, not what has the most funding. What's useful.
General Q&A, writing, and analysis: ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini. Pick one and learn it well. They're all good — the differences matter less than getting comfortable with one. (My honest take: Claude is best for long documents and nuanced writing. ChatGPT is best for breadth and plugins. Gemini is best if you're deep in Google's ecosystem.)
Coding: GitHub Copilot (autocomplete in your IDE), Cursor (AI-native code editor), Claude Code (command-line agent for multi-file work). If you write code and you're not using one of these, you're leaving serious productivity on the table.
Images and design: Midjourney (best quality), DALL-E (easiest to use through ChatGPT), Adobe Firefly (best for commercial use and editing existing images).
Meeting notes: Fireflies, Otter.ai, or Granola. Stop manually taking notes in meetings. Seriously. This is one of the highest-ROI AI tools and it takes 5 minutes to set up.
Data analysis: Claude handles CSVs beautifully. ChatGPT's Code Interpreter lets you upload a spreadsheet and ask questions in plain English. Both are shockingly good.
The most important advice: Don't try to use all of them. Pick 2-3 that match your actual workflow and go deep. A person who's great with one AI tool will outperform someone who dabbles in ten.
💡 Try This Today
Look at the categories above. Which ONE would save you the most time this week? Try the top tool in that category for a single task. Just one. That's your entry point.