A tiny utility that gives your laptop the satisfying click of a mechanical keyboard — without the keyboard.

Discover the very best
of the algorithm internet.
A weekly dispatch of thoughtfully chosen websites, apps, and hidden gems — from the strange, charming, and overlooked corners of the web.
A project by Tiny Startup Studio
A private, ad-free photo journal for your closest friends. The opposite of the algorithmic feed.
A beautifully organized home for all the apps, scripts, and side-projects you've collected over the years.
A research tool for curious people. Save images, links, and text into channels and watch unexpected connections emerge over time.
Wrap your screenshots in beautiful, customizable browser frames with one click. The fastest way to make a demo look polished.
A read-later app that highlights, resurfaces, and connects everything you save. The last reading app you'll ever need.
Save anything — articles, images, notes — and let AI silently figure out where they belong. Your extended memory, no folders required.
A search engine you pay for — so it has zero incentive to show you ads, sell your data, or bury the good results under SEO sludge.
A desktop widget that shows what's playing in Spotify or Apple Music — with album art that optionally changes your entire wallpaper.
Documents and notes that feel like Apple designed them — fast, beautiful, and blocks that actually snap together satisfyingly.
Mixable ambient sounds — rain, thunder, fire, waves — for focus and sleep. A web classic that just works.
A retro-aesthetic internet radio station that makes you feel like it's perpetual summer, 1987. Unmistakable vibes.
Music designed by neuroscientists to lock you into focus within minutes. Not lo-fi beats — actual research-backed neural entrainment.
Soundscapes that adapt to your heart rate, location, weather, and time of day. Feels like the world scoring your afternoon.
Over 200 customizable noise generators, completely free. Coffee shop, thunderstorm, medieval library — all tunable slider by slider.
The internet is full. We need editors, not algorithms.
There's never been more on the web, and somehow it's never been harder to find anything that feels made for a person rather than a metric. Feeds optimize for engagement; search optimizes for ads; recommendation engines optimize for the median. Nobody, anywhere, is optimizing for delight.
Curate the Internet is a small, weekly attempt to fix that. Every site here was opened, used, and considered by a human being who is reasonably tired of what the rest of the web has become. We pick what we'd send to a friend — strange tools, lovely small apps, and pages that remind us the web can still surprise us.
If something we featured made your week better, tell a friend. If you've found something we should see, send it our way. That's the whole loop.














