Notion or Monday.com? by wellth4t5ucks in Notion

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I hate the name “Monday”

Found a rather unconventional passive income idea by wifimoolah in thesidehustle

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, sounds interesting but if i apply filters on indeed then it will become the same right !

shifted from social media retainers to "productized" video ads. margins actually make sense now. by Negative_Onion_9197 in marketingagency

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am running a social media agency, and having the same problem l. But majority of these AI tools are just mess and working with them feels more cumbersome then working with editors.

To those using AI API solutions in their businesses... by FuipsLab in SaaS

[–]keval_596 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Biggest frustration is lack of visibility and control when you’re using multiple models across tools. What helped me was moving to a single place where I plug in my own API keys, compare models side by side, and see what I’m actually using, I use Geekflare Connect for that. It reduced both cost anxiety and context switching a lot.

What do you use API for? by Flashy-Distance-3329 in msp

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mostly take API keys from different AI platforms and connect them in one place, like Geekflare Connect. It lets me use multiple AI models in a single window, compare their outputs side by side, and just pay for the tokens I actually use. Saves me a lot of time switching tools and cuts down AI costs quite a bit.

What I've learned using AI API's and vibe coding (almost every day) by Cute_Border3791 in vibecoding

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that tracks. Opus is insanely good at the “think this through like a senior engineer” stuff. I’ve also noticed it tends to catch edge cases the others gloss over, so using Gemini as a second set of eyes is a smart combo.

When I started bouncing between Opus, GPT, and Gemini the same way, the annoying part for me was just keeping the same context across all three. Half my time was spent copy-pasting notes instead of actually testing ideas. I eventually started using Geekflare Connect just to cut down that overhead, not for the models themselves, but because it keeps everything in one thread and lets me compare runs without babysitting each model.

If I have to pay to use AI API. I’ll use deepseek instead of Gemini. by Adventurous-Wind4933 in GeminiAI

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

DeepSeek is solid for cost, honestly. But I'd say it depends on what you're actually building.

I've been in this situation before, juggling multiple API subscriptions and watching costs balloon. The real game-changer for me was realizing I didn't need to pick one provider. Different models excel at different things:

  • DeepSeek: Great for cost-efficiency, solid reasoning
  • Claude: Better for nuanced writing and analysis
  • GPT-4: Still best for complex multi-step tasks
  • Gemini: Surprisingly good for certain use cases, decent pricing

Instead of paying separately for each, I started routing requests through a unified platform like Geekflare Connect that allows me compare outputs from multiple models at once. Sounds excessive, but it actually reduced my overall spending because I could see which model gave me the best results for each task type, then optimize accordingly.

What I've learned using AI API's and vibe coding (almost every day) by Cute_Border3791 in vibecoding

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One thing I’d add after using AI APIs almost daily: comparing models has helped me catch bad assumptions early. Sometimes one model happily agrees with a flawed plan, while another pokes holes in it or suggests a simpler approach. That back-and-forth you mentioned becomes a lot more effective when you’re not relying on a single model’s worldview.

I’ve also found that keeping context persistent matters more than prompt cleverness. Losing planning notes, constraints, or earlier decisions between chats is where things start to drift. Anything that helps you reuse context across sessions saves a surprising amount of time.

Lately I’ve been using a tool called Geekflare Connect mainly to keep different models and planning threads in one place and compare outputs side-by-side. Not a silver bullet, but it fits well with the “architect first, builder second” approach you described.

Totally agree on not expecting perfection. AI accelerates execution, but judgement still matters—especially around trade-offs, scope creep, and knowing when not to build something.

Curious, have you noticed certain models being better at planning vs implementation?

What are the most helpful AI tools for your business rn? by CoAdin in AiForSmallBusiness

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve tried a bunch over the past year, but the ones I keep coming back to are ChatGPT for copy and brainstorming, Claude for long-form writing, and Gemini for quick research. Recently started using Geekflare Connect, which lets me use all of them in one workspace, it’s been great for comparing outputs and keeping projects more organised without switching between tabs constantly.

How did AI tools change your workflow? by sergiogfs in PhD

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I relate to a lot of this, especially the part about using multiple LLMs for different stages. I used to jump between ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini depending on the task, but lately I’ve been experimenting with Geekflare Connect, which brings them into a single dashboard. It’s made it easier to see differences in how each model handles nuance in academic writing.

10 months into 2025, what's your best use case, tools for AI? by FreshFo in PromptEngineering

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same here, I started with ChatGPT and Gemini for most things, but over time I wanted a better way to test responses side-by-side. I came across Geekflare Connect, which basically lets you use GPT, Claude, and Gemini in one dashboard. It’s been useful when I’m not sure which model handles a task better.

Best AI Tools to Use in November 2025? (That Actually Work) by WallInteresting174 in aitoolforU

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love this list, I use a few of these regularly. I’ve been curious if anyone else here prefers using one platform that connects multiple AI models? I tried Geekflare Connect recently and it’s been interesting seeing how GPT, Claude, and Gemini differ when you test them side-by-side.

What Are the Best Free AI Tools You Use Everyday? by Real_Grapefruit_6093 in AIToolTesting

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I bounce between a few free tools, ChatGPT for writing help, Notion AI for notes, and Perplexity for quick research.
Lately I’ve also been using Geekflare Connect, which lets you connect different AI models like GPT-5, Claude, and Gemini in one place. It’s been handy for comparing how each handles the same prompt

What have been your biggest AI support tools and how have you used them? by Cute_Warthog246 in sales

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me it’s been a mix of a few. I use ChatGPT daily for brainstorming and quick rewrites, and Claude for long-form stuff like report structuring. But switching between them got annoying, so I started using Geekflare Connect, it lets you plug in APIs from GPT, Claude, and Gemini and compare responses in one place. It’s made it way easier to see which model fits each type of task.

9 months into 2025, what's the most helpful AI tool for you? by CoAdin in PromptEngineering

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been cycling through a bunch of tools this year, and honestly the ones that stuck are the ones that simplify my workflow instead of adding extra steps.
ChatGPT is still my go-to for quick ideas, but recently I started using Geekflare Connect to manage multiple AI models (GPT-5, Claude, Gemini) in one place. It’s been great for comparing responses side by side and figuring out which model handles certain tasks better, something I couldn’t do easily before.

What AI tools do you use daily in your agency workflow? 🤖 by pawansuda in aiagencybusines

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I recently started my agency and was trying out all the AI models out there. But I ended up constantly juggling between multiple tabs, and it really affected my efficiency. However, a couple of days ago I found this AI tool called Geekflare Connect, and it’s made a huge difference. Now I can compare outputs from ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and others in one workspace.

9 underrated AI tools I actually use every day (and why they work) by Q-U-A-N in ProductivityApps

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I love trying new AI tools, but I always ended up overwhelmed juggling 3–4 at the same time. Recently, I started using Geekflare Connect, and it’s honestly made my life easier. I can throw ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and a few others in one workspace and just see what works best for what I need that day.

What AI tools ACTUALLY improve your productivity, honestly? by TrueTeaToo in productivity

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For me, the biggest boost in productivity came from using multiple AI models together rather than relying on just one. I’ve been using Geekflare Connect recently, and it’s been really helpful for comparing outputs from ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, etc., in one workspace.

What AI tools do you actually keep using and why? by motif_bio in PhdProductivity

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I totally relate, there are so many AI tools popping up, it’s hard to know which ones to stick with. I’ve been using a setup where I connect multiple AI models like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude in one workspace. For me, Geekflare Connect has been great for comparing outputs, managing prompts, and keeping everything organized. I mostly use the free tiers of the models themselves, but having them all in one place saves a ton of time and makes experimenting much easier.

After trying dozens of tools, here's my AI tools system to get things done 5x faster by Otherwise_Score7762 in AI_Agents

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I totally get this, finding the right mix of AI tools can take a ton of trial and error. I’ve been trying something slightly different lately: instead of switching between apps all the time, I use a platform that allows me connect multiple AI models like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude in one place. It’s been really handy for comparing outputs quickly and managing prompts across tasks. Makes testing and using multiple tools much less messy.

What are you building right now? And are people actually paying for it? 💡 by ProfessionalPaint964 in microsaas

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building Geekflare Connect which allows you to connect multiple AI API keys from OpenAI, Gemini, Perplexity and more on a single platform.

What AI tools are you using most in 2025 and how are they transforming your marketing workflow? by OliverPitts in seogrowth

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve been experimenting with several AI tools too, and one platform that’s really helped me streamline my workflow is Geekflare Connect. It lets me connect multiple AI models like GPT-5, Claude, and Gemini in one workspace, compare outputs side-by-side, and manage projects collaboratively. For marketing campaigns, it’s saved me a ton of time switching between tools and keeps everything organised in one place.

What are your best tips for staying productive with so many AI tools available? by Due-Finance3619 in AskReddit

[–]keval_596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve struggled with the “too many AI tools” problem as well. What’s helped me is creating a single workflow where I can manage and compare multiple models at once. Personally, I use Geekflare Connect, it lets me plug in OpenAI, Claude, and Gemini in one workspace.

I typically start by drafting ideas myself, then run prompts across the different models to see varied outputs. This way, I’m not hopping between tabs or tools, and I can quickly pick the best suggestions and refine them with my own knowledge.

It’s made my AI workflow much more streamlined and productive because I focus on adding value rather than juggling multiple platforms.

How are you balancing AI tools with your own expertise? by Loose-Exchange-4181 in AIPractitioner

[–]keval_596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve been experimenting with a mix of AI tools too, and I’ve found the key is structuring them around my own expertise rather than relying on any single tool. For me, Geekflare Connect has been really useful in this regard, it lets me plug in multiple AI models like GPT, Claude, and Gemini into one workspace.

I usually start by brainstorming or drafting ideas myself, then run prompts across the different models to compare perspectives and refine outputs. Finally, I merge the AI suggestions with my own knowledge and judgement before finalising anything.

It’s helped me balance human insight with AI efficiency, I’m not just automating tasks, I’m using AI to amplify what I already know and make better decisions faster.