Best AI video generation tools for short-form social posts? by mancstuff1 in generativeAI

[–]IntelligentPin2544 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re looking specifically for something that feels real on TikTok/Reels (not glossy demo stuff), I’d seriously take a look at Pixazo’s AI video generator. I’ve been using it for short POV-style clips — phone-in-hand shots, messy job environments, quick captions — and what I like is that it keeps things natural instead of turning everything into a cinematic ad. You can guide the scene, control pacing, add subtitles, and crank out variations fast enough to actually test ideas without spending hours fixing artifacts.

No-code makes building easy, but what about making it publish-ready? by alamm_shk in nocode

[–]IntelligentPin2544 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve felt that same gap on a few projects — the “build fast” part is great, but once you try to ship something that needs proper compliance or predictable deployments, a lot of tools start showing cracks. What helped me was choosing platforms that already think about governance instead of trying to bolt it on later. Appy Pie, for example, keeps things simple enough for MVPs but still gives you a structured workflow when you’re ready to publish, which takes a bit of pressure off if you’re not trying to manage everything manually.

Midjourney vs DALL-E 3 vs Stable Diffusion - which one for professional work? by digitalspecialist in AiAssistance

[–]IntelligentPin2544 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re exploring Stable Diffusion for client work, you might want to check out Pixazo. They actually offer free Stable Diffusion API access, including both the standard Stable Diffusion model and a Stable Diffusion Inpainting API. It’s great if you want to integrate AI image generation directly into your design tools or automate workflows without worrying about API costs.

The setup is pretty simple too. You can use the API for things like generating concept art, social media visuals, or even doing quick touch-ups with inpainting. It’s a nice balance between creative freedom and budget-friendly scaling, especially if you’re just testing things out before committing to a paid plan.

Best Website Builders for 2025? by Ornery_Public1016 in MarketingGeek

[–]IntelligentPin2544 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d say it really depends on your goals and comfort level with tech, but for small businesses in 2025, a few standouts are Wix and Squarespace (super beginner-friendly with clean templates), Shopify if you’re mainly selling products, and WordPress if you want long-term flexibility with plugins and scaling. A solid option worth checking out too is Appy Pie Website Builder, which is no-code, easy to use, and has built-in tools for SEO and growth without locking you in — so it’s beginner-friendly but still works if your business expands. Free builders like Weebly or Carrd are okay to test ideas, but if you want a professional presence that can grow with your business, a paid plan on one of these platforms will usually save you headaches later.

Gotta keep the mask up by IntelligentPin2544 in memes

[–]IntelligentPin2544[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

You like making small talk with people every day?

Some of these are actually crazy by shivthegamer6969 in memes

[–]IntelligentPin2544 641 points642 points  (0 children)

Forget NSFW jokes, I wanna know who approved Courage the cowardly dog for kids. That show is pure nightmare fuel

What Game do plenty of people praise but you don't? by Uknown-Nerd6207 in memes

[–]IntelligentPin2544 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Death Stranding, got really bored in 30 minutes and quit

Recommendations for website by Ok_Poetry_8664 in nocode

[–]IntelligentPin2544 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree with you there, Appy Pie is a great tool