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Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from February 10, 2026

StayAwake.Dev is a new web-based tool that prevents system sleep to help developers avoid interruptions during long tasks.

Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from February 10, 2026

Yesterday brought a fresh batch of tools aiming to streamline digital workflows, and a couple stand out as genuinely useful new developer tools for anyone staring down a complex project. From keeping your screen active to organizing your scattered thoughts, here’s a look at what just hit the market.

StayAwake.Dev

For developers who have ever lost a deployment or a long-running process because their laptop decided to take a nap, StayAwake.Dev is a straightforward solution. It’s a web-based productivity hub that does one primary thing exceptionally well: it keeps your screen awake. By leveraging the Wake Lock API in a dedicated tab, it prevents your system from sleeping, which is a simple but often overlooked need.

But it packs in more than just a digital cup of coffee. It combines this core function with a Pomodoro timer to help manage focus sessions, a flip clock for a bit of retro charm, and basic task management tools. It’s the kind of all-in-one station that makes sense for a developer who wants to minimize distractions and context switching. Having the timer and task list right there next to the wake lock means you’re not tab-hopping to another app. The fact that it’s completely free is a significant plus, removing any barrier to giving it a try. It’s not going to replace a full-featured project management suite, but for individual coders looking to maintain flow state, it’s a clever and focused tool.

Taskmelt - AI Task Planner

Taskmelt tackles a very modern problem: mental overload. The premise is simple—you perform a "brain dump," typing or speaking every task, idea, and reminder swirling in your head. The AI then takes that chaos and attempts to organize it into a coherent, prioritized schedule. This is aimed less at developers specifically and more at anyone feeling overwhelmed by their to-do list.

The success of an app like this lives and dies by the intelligence of its AI. A truly effective system would need to understand dependencies, realistic time allocation, and personal priorities. The freemium model suggests the core functionality is accessible, but the most powerful features—perhaps deeper integration or more complex scheduling logic—likely sit behind a paywall. For someone who struggles with the initial step of organizing a mountain of tasks, it could be a helpful starting point. The mobile-first approach makes it convenient for capturing ideas on the go, though power users might wish for a web or desktop companion for deeper planning sessions.

MardiPay

In the often-intimidating world of cryptocurrency, MardiPay is attempting to bring a layer of simplicity reminiscent of traditional digital payments. Its goal is to make sending and receiving payments on the Solana blockchain as easy as using UPI or Venmo. Instead of dealing with long, complex wallet addresses that are prone to errors, users can create and use simple Sol IDs (like yourname.sol).

This addresses a major point of friction in crypto adoption. By allowing transfers of SOL, USDC, and EURC with these human-readable identifiers, along with on-chain verification for transparency, MardiPay lowers the barrier to entry. It’s a web app, which makes it accessible without a download, and it’s free to use. This could be particularly useful for freelancers in the web3 space, DAO participants, or anyone regularly transacting on Solana who is tired of the copy-paste-and-pray method of sending crypto. Its success will hinge on widespread adoption of the Sol ID system, but the concept is squarely aimed at solving a real usability problem.

Trust SEO

The SEO industry is flooded with tools that offer metrics and scores, but the validity of that data is always a question. Trust SEO is trying to cut through the noise by grounding its authority rankings in a verifiable source: real Google Search Console data. The idea is that by connecting your GSC account, you get a ranking based on actual performance, not third-party estimates.

The social component is interesting. They’ve created a leaderboard where sites can earn a verified badge, ostensibly promoting a community of publishers focused on genuine growth. The promise of "collaborative growth opportunities" is a bit vague, but it suggests a move away from purely competitive SEO toward a more transparent, data-backed ecosystem. For website owners and SEO professionals skeptical of the black box algorithms of other tools, Trust SEO’s approach is compelling. Being free also makes it an easy addition to an existing toolkit for validation purposes. The value will be in the insights it can generate from that clean data set.

Sway

Meetings and brainstorming sessions are fertile ground for ideas that often get lost in a sea of notes. Sway aims to capture that spontaneous thinking and give it structure. It listens to your spoken thoughts—during a meeting, a solo brainstorming session, or even a casual conversation—and automatically generates summaries, extracts key points, and creates actionable to-do lists.

The potential here is massive for teams and individual creators alike. The ability to offload the task of notetaking and synthesis could make meetings more productive and ensure follow-through. The obvious comparison is to tools like Otter.ai, but Sway seems to be pushing further into the automation of structure and action items, not just transcription. As a free web app, it’s positioned for easy adoption. The big question, as with all AI-based transcription and analysis tools, is accuracy. How well does it discern key points from tangential chatter? If it works as promised, it could become a staple for project managers, consultants, and content creators.

A Note on Rankings These products launched without initial community voting data, so we can't point to a top-ranked favorite yet. Based on their utility, StayAwake.Dev and Sway feel like they have the most immediate, broad appeal, while MardiPay solves a very specific but significant pain point in its niche.

It’s interesting to see a trend toward tools that act as intelligent assistants, whether it’s keeping your workspace alive, organizing your tasks, or structuring your conversations. The focus is less on adding new features and more on reducing the cognitive load of using technology itself.


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