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4 new AI tools that are worth your time
4 new AI tools that are worth your time

Fast Company

time2 hours ago

  • Business
  • Fast Company

4 new AI tools that are worth your time

Four new AI tools caught my attention recently for solving specific problems well. They are free to try and quick to learn, and they point toward where AI is heading. 1. Lovart: Create a brand kit or marketing campaign with an AI design agent Lovart 's conversational interface allows you to generate posters, social posts, branding kits, storyboards—even packaging. Unlike other image generation tools, you can generate dozens of images from a single prompt, then iterate on the results in a chat dialogue. You can also edit the images. I used an eraser to remove stray text in a promo poster. Pricing: Free (limited use), or $15 to $26/month billed annually for additional usage and pro models. 2. Little Language Lessons: Brush up on French, Spanish, or other languages Polish your linguistic skills in three different ways using Google's Little Language Lessons. Unlike Duolingo, Babbel, and other subscription language-learning systems, this is completely free. It's just for micro-learning—picking up some words, phrases, and grammar—not for developing full fluency. Tiny Lessons: Pick from a long list of languages and type in a scenario—like hosting a meeting or going to a concert. Learn related words and phrases. Slang Hang: Catch up on popular new chitchat by watching a conversation thread between native speakers. While listening, you'll see the translation. Word Cam: Snap a picture to get translations of objects in the image, along with related phrases. Tip: Use this app on a mobile device—it will be handier for capturing images than your computer's webcam. 3. Gemini Scheduled Actions: Set up simple AI automations Scheduled actions are an emerging format where AI assistants send you personalized updates. You design the task and choose its frequency. ChatGPT Tasks, Perplexity Tasks, and Gemini's Scheduled Actions are three I've been testing. Get notified when a task is completed by email, push notification, or within the app. Here are a few examples. Generate a summary of headlines on your niche topic. I get positive news memos to counter the weight of news negativity. Ask for one-sentence takeaways, source links, specific subtopics, or whatever else interests you. Get weather-related wardrobe suggestions. Create morning weather updates with outfit ideas based on a list of wardrobe items you provide for personalized guidance. Plan a creative spark moment. Get a daily—or weekly—prompt for a creative activity: writing, drawing, journaling, cooking, or whatever you love. Catch up on your favorite teams, shows, or bands. Request updates on your favorite artists or athletes. Unlike services like Google Alerts, these AI actions let you use natural language to detail your personal interests. Explore new restaurants to try. Ask for a weekly summary of new nearby eateries, cafés, or dessert spots, with whatever criteria matters to you most. 4. MyLens: Create an infographic from a link, YouTube video, or text Creating infographics can be complicated and time-consuming. I've been experimenting with MyLens to convert raw material into visuals. How it works: Paste in text or upload a PDF, image, or CSV/Excel file. Or add a link to a site, article, or YouTube video. What you can make: Generate timelines, flowcharts, tables, or quadrant diagrams. Or upload data to create line, bar, or doughnut charts. 📺 Watch MyLens's one-minute demo video to see it in action. Pricing: Free to create three non-editable, public infographics ('stories') a day, or $9/month billed annually for 300 monthly editable creations.

With one prompt, I built an entire brand kit in an hour using Lovart
With one prompt, I built an entire brand kit in an hour using Lovart

Tom's Guide

time5 days ago

  • Tom's Guide

With one prompt, I built an entire brand kit in an hour using Lovart

Many tools promise to unleash your creativity but then force you to wrestle with layers, templates and settings. As you drag things pixel by pixel and juggle Canva, Figma, Midjourney and ChatGPT you end up praying that your vision will survive the process. If you've ever tried to build a brand kit from scratch — the logo, the social banners, the promo video, the product page — you'll know how brutal things get without a designer. All too often you end up bouncing between five different apps and five YouTube tabs just to make something halfway usable. There has to be a better way. And I think I've found it. When I came across Lovart — an AI that claimed it could generate over 40 branded assets from a single prompt — I gave it the most honest test possible. No prep. No fancy prompts. No design background. Just a raw idea. The result? In less than one hour I had a complete brand kit — logo, landing page, product visuals, and a full-motion video — all export-ready and shockingly good. Lovart describes itself as an "AI Design Agent," not just a tool. You don't have to "create" everything — Lovart reads your idea and makes creative decisions on your behalf. Let me show you how it works. Here's what I typed: "A minimalist skincare brand inspired by ocean minerals, called NEU." Seconds later, I got: No file juggling. No bouncing between tools. Everything simply showed up in the same interface, fully editable and export-ready. The quality genuinely surprised me. This wasn't "AI slop". It looked like something a junior designer might produce after a few days of work. It was clean, professional, and actually usable. Here's what makes Lovart different from other AI design tools: it's not running one model. It coordinates multiple specialized AI systems and gets them to work together. Under the hood, it's using: The magic is in the orchestration. Each model contributes to a unified result that feels brand-consistent and intentional — not like random assets stitched together. You can edit anything: shorten the video, tweak fonts, change product names, adjust the colors. It's a truly plug-and-play design, but it delivers the polish you'd expect from paying an agency. What stood out most wasn't just the speed. It was how consistent Lovart felt across multiple tries. I tested it with lots of different brand concepts: a coffee shop, a tech startup, a fitness app. Every single time it delivered coherent, on-brand results without me having to babysit the process or write perfect prompts. It doesn't get tired. It doesn't get confused. It doesn't over-design or under-deliver. It just gets on with the job. It listens, executes, and adjusts — again and again and again, until it gets it right. It felt less like using software and more like working with someone who's patient, fast, and never runs out of ideas. As a creator, that felt safe – and honestly, kind of luxurious. Elena Rodriguez, Lovart's co-founder and COO, says that this human-like presence is intentional: I've used Canva, struggled with Figma, and spent hours wrestling with Photoshop. And Lovart required none of that background knowledge. The interface is refreshingly simple: there's a big text box where you describe your idea, and an infinite canvas where results appear. You can refine anything by typing natural language requests like "make the logo more playful" or "create a darker color palette." There are no layers to manage. No export settings to figure out. No subscription limits across different tools. Just tell Lovart what you want, and watch it materialize. For context, building the same brand kit manually would have taken me: That's a total of 8+ hours, plus frustration. With Lovart: 45 minutes, plus excitement about what else it could do. Lovart won't replace human designers at big agencies. But for creators, marketers, small business owners, and indie builders it's genuinely game-changing. Who this works best for: What you get with one subscription: Access to multiple premium AI models that would normally require separate subscriptions, plus the coordination layer that makes them work together. It's like hiring a creative team that actually listens and never misses a deadline. Lovart isn't magic. Here's what I noticed: If Canva is a toolkit, Lovart is a collaborator. If Midjourney is inspiration, Lovart is execution. For the first time, you can go from "I have an idea" to "it's ready to publish" without getting lost in the tools, tutorials, or technical complexity. Is it perfect? No. Is it useful enough to pay for? Absolutely. Especially if you value your time and sanity more than learning design software. Pricing: Lovart starts at $29/month for individual creators, with team plans available. Given that you'd normally pay that much just for Canva Pro, and this includes access to multiple premium AI models plus coordination, it's reasonable value. Try it yourself: Lovart is now publicly available at

Lovart Launches Globally: End-to-End Design Agent Exits Beta, Powered by the World's First AI Creative Reasoning Engine
Lovart Launches Globally: End-to-End Design Agent Exits Beta, Powered by the World's First AI Creative Reasoning Engine

Globe and Mail

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Globe and Mail

Lovart Launches Globally: End-to-End Design Agent Exits Beta, Powered by the World's First AI Creative Reasoning Engine

Lovart's design Agent launches publicly, after attracting 800,000 Beta testers. Lovart delivers six or higher branding budgets in minutes. San Francisco, California--(Newsfile Corp. - July 23, 2025) - Lovart, a bold AI design and branding Agent with capabilities of an award-winning creative team, has officially launched its long-awaited generative design platform, exiting Beta with a bold mission: to generate six figure or higher branding and advertising campaigns using nothing more than a single text prompt. Positioned as a disruptive force within the branding world with 800,000 users across 70 countries, Lovart is enabling in-house brands and boutique agencies who are already weaving AI into their teams, to unlock 4A agency-quality branding. Lovart's launch comes at a pivotal moment. Just as AI has reshaped education, AI agents are quickly becoming essential within creative organizations. Teams are increasingly relying on generative tools not just to assist but to also lead in shaping and dictating visual trends, much like fashion editors do each season. Only now, the editor isn't human. It's AI. The Creative Engine Powering Lovart Under the hood, Lovart is powered by its proprietary creative reasoning engine, MCoT (Mind Chain of Thought). Going as far as assessing and analyzing the brand's requirements, business context, and the target audience, its output is on par with top-tier Creative Directors and professional-grade visual assets. With just a simple text prompt or a reference image, users can generate up to 40 high-fidelity, agency-quality assets in only minutes. From branding kits, social posts and storyboards to UI flows and even packaging, Lovart delivers a breadth of output rarely seen in a single platform. But what truly sets it apart is its creative intelligence - the first of its kind to infuse visual outputs with an unexpected, witty, and human-like flair. "At Lovart, we don't have product managers. We have designers who teach AI how to think, in a way that you might expect from a Creative Director," said Melvin Chen, CEO of Lovart. "The canvas is the desk. The agent is your teammate. Together, they recreate the most natural way design happens that captures nuance, emotion and brand essence within a single prompt, enabling anyone to bring their creative visions to life, even without a design background." Inside Lovart: The Features Redefining Creative Work ChatCanvas - Lovart's "ChatCanvas" is an infinite, intelligent canvas that responds to intent through shared visual and dialogue. It is built for true creative collaboration between humans and AI. Multi-agent Co-Creation - Lovart is powered by specialized AI agents, each handling a distinct creative task whether it's designing logos or packaging, to UI/UX mock ups and competitive research. These agents collaborate on complex campaigns while staying aligned through a shared context layer called "Design Context Core." This ensures Lovart is contextually aware of the broader brand campaign, ensuring cohesive and on-brand output across all materials. Autonomous Design Intelligence - Unlike other platforms, Lovart's design prowess is comparable to a Creative Director, capable of guiding you from idea to execution. It's capable of planning the workflow, sourcing design references, all the way to delivering the output. Long-Term Recall - But also like humans, Lovart learns over time. It not only remembers your preferences, design choices, and imported assets, but also analyzes them to understand emotional tone and context. For example, it can interpret a color palette and automatically apply the right hues to future projects. Learns and Predicts Workflow Habits - Lovart also learns your workflow habits, whether you design for Instagram or YouTube, and where you draw inspiration from, whether it's Pinterest or Behance. It also predicts your next move and offers smart suggestions, flagging layout issues, color mismatches, or creative opportunities in real time. Advanced Canvas Editing - Modify layers, adjust text, and fine-tune layout and styles with built-in tools. Control everything from font to form in one place. Top AI Models Under One Roof - As a full-spectrum creative suite, Lovart also supports cross-modal generation across image, video, and audio. Lovart supports top AI models. About Lovart Lovart AI is a San Francisco-based technology company pioneering the world's first Design Agent - an AI-native system that interprets creative intent, decomposes complex tasks, and coordinates leading multimodal models to deliver comprehensive outputs across image, video, and 3D formats. Co-founded by Lovart's CEO Melvin Chen and Haofan Wang, an AI researcher with training from Carnegie Mellon University, and supported by a global team of experts in AI systems and creative tooling, Lovart is transforming the creative landscape. Since launching in 2025, Lovart has rapidly gained traction with more than 800,000 users, fundamentally changing how modern creators and studios approach design workflows. To learn more about Lovart visit

China's tech talent are making big strides — they're creating apps for the world
China's tech talent are making big strides — they're creating apps for the world

CNBC

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • CNBC

China's tech talent are making big strides — they're creating apps for the world

BEIJING — Chinese developers are powering some of the latest artificial intelligence tools aimed at a global market. Melvin Chen moved to San Francisco from China to co-found AI design startup Lovart, which officially launched Wednesday — after claiming "800,000 users across 70 countries" for its test version. "We will focus on North America as the first step," Chen said in Mandarin, translated by CNBC. He previously led China operations for CapCut, a popular video-editing app from ByteDance that still ranks first in the photo and video category in Apple's U.S. App Store. Lovart uses AI to generate logos, stickers and other branding visuals based on text prompts. The new version launching Wednesday includes a "ChatCanvas" feature that claims to make specific edits easier — a client might ask a professional designer to switch two icons, a task difficult to explain only with words but simple when visuals are included, Chen said. He expects Lovart to surpass 1 million users in the week after its launch. But he said the app isn't coming to China soon, mostly because it's based on Anthropic's Claude 4 AI model and others from OpenAI — both of which aren't officially available in China. Beijing has to give generative AI models the green light for public use and operates a stringent firewall that blocks sites such as Google and Facebook. Companies also have their own rules about where their services can be used. While most of Lovart's team is based in San Francisco with the aim of better localizing the product, Chen said part of the production team is in China. He declined to share operating costs, and said the startup would seek investor funding after securing sufficient user growth. Lovart has a free-to-use option, with monthly subscription fees of up to $90 for wider usage. In a global AI race, the U.S. government has in the last several years ramped up its restrictions on American companies selling advanced semiconductors to China. San Francisco-based OpenAI launched its ChatGPT chatbot in late 2022, and it wasn't until January this year that China produced a clear rival with DeepSeek's breakthrough. But analysts have long expected China's AI advantage would likely lie in applications rather than models, especially given that internet-based Chinese companies were able to build massive food delivery and short-video apps for the large local consumer market. Already in AI video generation, Kuaishou's Kling and Shengshu's Vidu have gained global users in the last 18 months. In the realm of AI agents that can automatically perform a series of complex tasks, Manus has caught international attention. "China-affiliated teams are increasingly influential, driven by concentrated technical talent, agile development culture, and policy support for AI commercialization," said Charlie Dai, vice president and principal analyst at Forrester. "They excel in cost-efficient model training and rapid consumer app iteration, often prioritizing open-source accessibility." "Chinese models now compete globally, challenging U.S. dominance while lowering AI costs," he said. Another advantage is that China models such as DeepSeek and several others are open source, meaning they are free for developers to download and use. Hugging Face, an online platform that allows people to try out open source AI models, regularly show that China models are among the top trending ones for users. As of Wednesday, the Kimi K2 coding-focused model that was launched this month ranked first on the site, followed by Alibaba's Qwen3 coding-focused modes that launched earlier in the day. In image-to-3D models, Tencent's Hunyuan ranks first, while France-based Mistral's Voxtral ranks first in audio-text-to-text. Chen said Lovart will focus on AI for generating images and videos rather than 3D models. "AI is the new camera ... [for] capturing human imagination," he said. He said the startup aims to build traction by holding events with the design community, including in New York, Tokyo and Europe. ChatGPT is by far the most popular AI app in the West, with 70 million monthly users on average in the U.S. and 144.6 million in Europe as of July, according to Sensor Tower. Google's Gemini was a distant second in both markets, but while Microsoft Copilot ranked third in the U.S., DeepSeek held the third spot in Europe, the data showed. During a visit to Beijing last week, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said nearly all of DeepSeek's users had downloaded the model to run it locally in countries around the world. He also emphasized that priorities for AI development are shifting. "I think over time it will be increasingly less important which one of the models are the smartest," he said. "It's going to be which one of the models are the most useful."

Lovart Launches The First Design Agent, Draws Global User Surge
Lovart Launches The First Design Agent, Draws Global User Surge

Yahoo

time29-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Lovart Launches The First Design Agent, Draws Global User Surge

SAN FRANCISCO, May 29, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Lovart, a San Francisco-based AI startup, has officially launched its autonomous design agent — a platform designed to automate the entire creative process, from concept to final deliverables. Unlike traditional AI tools focused on single outputs, Lovart enables users to generate dozens of professional-grade assets simultaneously, spanning images, video, audio, and 3D. The system integrates multiple AI models, orchestrating hundreds of design steps automatically to produce layered, editable content ready for direct use. From Concept to Production: A New Design Paradigm Users input a single prompt, and Lovart delivers up to 40 outputs, including storyboards, branding kits, UI flows, and multimedia content. The platform features an infinite canvas with advanced editing tools familiar to designers, such as layers, masks, and text refinement. Export formats include PNG, SVG, video, and audio — ensuring outputs meet professional standards. Launch Reception and Market Response Within the first 24 hours of its launch on X (formerly Twitter), a discussion thread about Lovart garnered over 5,000 posts, reflecting strong community engagement. The waitlist grew rapidly, surpassing 100,000 users across 70+ countries within five Discord server has become a vibrant hub where users hold 'Agent Battles,' competitions that pit the platform's AI agents against complex creative briefs in real Context: The Rise of Vertical AI Agents Industry analysts view Lovart as a prime example of the growing trend towards vertical AI agents — domain-specific AI systems designed to replace traditional workflows. YC partner Jared Friedman characterizes these agents as 'autonomous teammates' that extend beyond general-purpose AI, bringing specialized expertise to complex tasks. Community and Creative Use Cases Early adopters are using Lovart to produce full marketing campaigns, multimedia storyboards, and interactive design projects with minimal manual input. The platform's seamless orchestration of multimodal AI models allows creatives to focus on ideas while the agent handles execution. Access and Further Information Lovart continues to onboard new users and expand its feature set. Interested professionals can learn more or join the waitlist via: Website: Twitter (X): Discord: Lovart positions itself as a new standard in creative automation, offering professionals an autonomous agent capable of handling complex, multimodal design workflows from start to finish. About Lovart Lovart AI is a San Francisco-based technology company pioneering the world's first Design Agent — an AI-native system that interprets creative intent, decomposes complex tasks, and coordinates leading multimodal models to deliver comprehensive outputs across image, video, and 3D formats. Co-founded by Haofan Wang, an AI researcher with training from Carnegie Mellon University, and supported by a global team of experts in AI systems and creative tooling, Lovart is transforming the creative landscape. Since launching in 2025, the platform has rapidly gained traction with over 100,000 users joining within just 5 days, fundamentally changing how modern creators and studios approach design workflows. Media Contact Organization: Resonate International lNC Contact Person: Jane Huo Email: aimeey@ Country: United States City: San francisco Website: Photos accompanying this announcement are available at: in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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