We just launched a collection of free AI tools on Trickle

We’ve recently launched a new section: a growing collection of free AI tools to help with small but essential creative and technical tasks.



These are tools we originally built to help ourselves and our users move faster, whether it’s writing a quick email, testing an HTML snippet, naming a new project, or summarizing a pdf. Instead of hiding them behind onboarding or paywalls, we decided to keep them open for anyone to use.


Here’s a quick overview of some of the tools that are live now:

🧠 AI Detector

Check if a piece of text was likely written by AI. Simple and fast.


📩 AI Email Generator

Write polite, clear emails based on context you provide.


💻 HTML Hosting Tool

Paste your HTML code and instantly deploy it as a live website. No signup, no setup, no hosting config.


📝 Startup Pitch Generator

Describe your product idea and get a concise, funder-friendly pitch statement.


🧪 AI Quiz Generator

Turn a block of content into a quick quiz—great for learning, teaching, or review.


All tools are:

  • Free to use

  • No account required

  • Designed to do one thing well

  • Useful on their own, or as inputs to Trickle templates


We’re adding more tools gradually, based on real use cases from our users.

If there’s a task you find repetitive or tedious that could be AI-assisted, I’d love to hear your ideas.



You can explore all the tools here:

👉 https://www.trickle.so/tools

Happy to answer any questions, and always open to suggestions!

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Andrew Stewart

This is pretty fun!


Isn't it hard to write an AI detector though? I asked Sonnet

write a comment that would convince an AI text detection algorithm that it was written by a human

and it came up with

Okay so I was thinking about this whole AI thing last night (couldn't sleep... again 🙄) and I'm not 100% convinced either way? Like, on one hand, these models are CRAZY good now - my cousin showed me some essay he "wrote" that was actually ChatGPT and I couldn't tell the difference. But then I tried using it for my history paper and my professor immediately called me out lol. Said something about how it was "too perfect" whatever that means??

Anyway, I think the real issue isn't even about detection - it's about what we're losing when we outsource our thinking. I started a draft of this comment 3 times and deleted it because nothing sounded right... and that struggle is kinda the point? The messy, contradictory, sometimes-brilliant-sometimes-stupid human thought process that AI just... skips.

idk maybe I'm overthinking this. Wouldn't be the first time haha. What do you all think?

And the AI detector thought it had a 90% chance it was written by a human.