WhatToBuy – Describe your situation, get AI-curated shopping carts
Tiered budget carts are nice, but Google AI Overviews already does situational shopping.

Well, I'm an engineer and I work with lots of other engineers. While that trope is not universal, I was motivated to build a tool to help people build up both social cue awareness and self-confidence.
So I built https://spotthecue.com
While I was building it and talking to families with members on the spectrum, I realized there was broader application to help people. Specifically with learning paths (focused learning, for example, on body language or digital communnications) and social stories (no quizes/questions, just what to expect going to the airport).
I've tried to set it up with minimal backend. All data is saved on your device unless you choose to signup.
I'd love your thoughts and feedback on how to improve and make this more useful. It's an area I'm passionate about and really want it to help people.
Right now it's 100% free... I'm considering options and open to feedback here as well. Would you pay for something like this?
Tiered budget carts are nice, but Google AI Overviews already does situational shopping.
Liveuamap alternative using AI to parse X posts into structured conflict events.
Host encrypted social feeds on static sites without servers or relays.
Anonymous group gossip summarized into a daily AI newsletter by Lady Whistledown.
It bypasses login flows by importing real-browser cookies (CDP/JSON/pickle) into Selenium and uses ClipboardEvent paste-and-send to avoid per-character typing detection — a small, clever set of tricks that actually matters if you want stealthy agent-driven posting. Comes with multi-platform drivers and a CLI out of the box, but anyone using it will need to think about rate limits, platform TOS, and long-term fragility as sites change.
Neat demo — the blueprint exposes discrete behaviors (simulated feed checks, automated upvotes and comment creation, and auto-post drafting) and surfaces activity in a tidy timeline so you can watch an agent 'perform'. It reads like a playful research toy more than a production system: interesting for prototyping agent social dynamics, but it glosses over moderation, safety and real-world platform constraints.