Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from February 21, 2026
Yesterday's new tools included SiteLove.io, which builds websites for local businesses directly from Google Maps links.
Yesterday brought another interesting mix of new developer tools and applications to the scene, proving that innovation continues to thrive across different sectors. From simplifying web development for local businesses to providing new ways to verify digital content, February 21, 2026, had something for founders, sales teams, and privacy-conscious users alike.
SiteLove.io
If you've ever tried to help a local business owner get a simple website online, you know the process can be surprisingly complex. SiteLove.io tackles this head-on with a remarkably straightforward premise: paste a Google Maps link, and it generates a complete, professional-looking website in about ninety seconds. It’s built for speed and simplicity, automating the inclusion of essential features like booking systems, WhatsApp integration, contact forms, and even pulling in an Instagram feed.
The tech stack is telling—Claude for the AI smarts, Stripe for payments, Supabase for the backend, and Cloudflare for delivery. This suggests a focus on reliability and scalability right out of the gate. It’s a paid product, which makes sense given the operational costs, and it’s accessible via web, mobile, and desktop. This isn't a tool for building a complex web application, but for a restaurant, salon, or local shop that just needs a clean, functional web presence immediately, it seems like a solid solution. The real test will be how customizable the generated sites are beyond the initial template.
Decks For Good
Fundraising is often a black box for first-time founders. You send your pitch deck into the void and hope for feedback that rarely comes. Decks For Good introduces an interesting altruistic twist to this problem. Instead of paying a consultant, founders make a $1,000 donation to a vetted nonprofit. In return, they get detailed feedback on their pitch deck from top investors and experienced repeat founders.
The model is compelling because it aligns incentives. The advisors are presumably participating partly for the philanthropic angle, which might lead to more genuine and constructive criticism than a purely transactional relationship. It’s a paid service, but the cost is redirected toward a cause, which could be a significant draw for socially conscious startups. The obvious question is the vetting process for both the nonprofits and the advisors to ensure the feedback is truly high-value. For a founder struggling to get traction, this could be a worthwhile investment that also does some good.
Origami.chat
Sales teams are drowning in data but often starved for actionable leads. Origami.chat aims to streamline the entire top-of-funnel process through AI-powered workflows. The platform helps teams build targeted prospect lists, enrich that data with relevant information, and ultimately aims to help close deals faster. Operating on a freemium model makes it easy for teams to try it out without a major commitment.
The promise here is efficiency. Manually building lists and researching prospects is incredibly time-consuming. If Origami’s AI can accurately identify and qualify ideal customer profiles, it could free up sales reps to focus on what they do best: selling. The success of such a tool hinges entirely on the quality of its data sources and the intelligence of its algorithms. A freemium tier is a smart move to get teams hooked, but the real value will be in how much time it actually saves and whether those time savings translate into more closed business.
Clawi.ai
The idea of having a personalized AI assistant is appealing, but running one locally can be a resource drain on your own machine. Clawi.ai offers a managed hosting service for your OpenClaw AI assistant, letting it run 24/7 in the cloud. The key features are its integration with popular messengers like WhatsApp, Telegram, and Discord, coupled with promises of full privacy and persistent memory.
This is for the power user who wants a constant, context-aware companion without dedicating their own hardware. The privacy guarantee is critical here, as you’re essentially entrusting your conversations and data to a third party. Being a paid service suggests they aren’t monetizing user data, which is a positive sign. The utility would depend heavily on the underlying capabilities of the OpenClaw model itself, but the convenience factor of a always-on, cross-platform assistant is undeniable for those who have integrated AI deeply into their daily workflows.
isFake.ai
As AI-generated content becomes indistinguishable from human-created work, the ability to verify authenticity is turning into a critical need. isFake.ai enters this space as a multi-modal detector, analyzing text, images, videos, and audio. It doesn’t just give a simple yes/no; it provides a confidence score and, importantly, visual evidence to support its analysis.
A freemium model is perfect for this kind of tool. It allows journalists, researchers, educators, or just curious individuals to perform quick checks without a barrier, while presumably offering higher volume or more advanced features for paying customers. The biggest challenge for any detector is staying ahead of rapidly evolving generative models. Its long-term viability will depend on the continuous improvement of its detection algorithms. In an era of deepfakes and AI-written news, a reliable verification tool could become as essential as a spell checker.
Quick Links to Yesterday's Launches
For more details on any of these new tools, check out the links below: