Yesterday's Top Launches: 5 Tools from May 14, 2026
On May 14, 2026, a set of modest but clever apps quietly solved five everyday annoyances for product teams, budgeters, AI tinkerers, reluctant networkers, and stat-loving football fans.

Yesterday’s batch of launches felt like opening five different toolboxes at once: one for product teams, one for everyday budgeters, one for AI tinkerers, one for closet introverts who still have to network, and one for football nerds who think spreadsheets are a love language. None of them scream “moonshot” on paper, yet each quietly fixes a headache the rest of us stopped complaining about because we assumed it was unsolvable. Here’s what actually shipped on May 14, 2026, and why you might care.
Omniflow keeps your spec, design and code in one moving piece
Most new developer tools treat the first working prototype as the finish line. Omniflow treats it as mile one. You type a quick spec—literally bullet points in a Notion-style editor—preview the UI before a single div is written, then let the platform stamp out a full-stack build that stays married to that original brief. When marketing suddenly wants a “share” button, you add the line item; the design mock and the React code shuffle themselves into place without the usual weekend rewrite. Early users are calling it “git for intent,” which sounds lofty until you realise how many side projects die the moment the second feature request arrives. Free while it’s hot, 15 % off paid tiers if you jump in this month.
Sumyfi turns 12 000 bank feeds into one sentence: “You’re fine, chill.”
I’ve lost count of the finance dashboards that drown me in neon pie charts yet never answer the only question I have before ordering takeaway: can I afford it this week? Sumyfi plugs into everything from high-street giants to that fintech you signed up for because they gave you a neon card. It strips the raw feed down to four tiles: spent, saved, subs, net worth. The insight engine is almost rude in its brevity—“You’re on track to waste £312 on forgotten trials this year, want help cancelling?”—but that’s exactly why it’ll survive longer than the last five expense-tracking spreadsheets you abandoned. Web and mobile, free, no ads, no “premium coaching” upsell (yet).
NewAgentsHub lets you ship an actual AI app, not a fancy chat bubble
If you’ve ever cursed Zapier for capping you at 100 zaps or watched a no-code tutorial collapse the moment you need an API call, NewAgentsHub feels like stepping through the wardrobe. Describe the flow in plain English—“Every morning pull my Shopify returns, ping the logistics AI agent, Slack me the risky ones”—and the engine wires up MCP servers, LLM routing and error recovery under a single sandboxed iframe. You can embed the finished thing anywhere, hand it to a client, or clone it for the next gig. The pricing is straight pay-as-you-go; no seat gymnastics, which agencies will love. Downside: the docs are still half community-wiki, so set aside an hour to hunt for the right preset.
Kenoki remembers who-knows-who so you don’t have to fake it
Post-meeting notes are useless if you can’t surface them three months later when someone mentions “Sarah” and you’re too embarrassed to ask which Sarah. Kenoki swallows your messy one-liner—“Met Sarah Chen at WebSummit, ex-Stripe, now climate fund, introduced by Tom”—and builds a local graph you can interrogate like a nosy detective. “Who at Acme knows Sarah?” spits out a tidy subgraph plus the original note. Everything sits on your laptop; no cloudy gossip server required. The LinkedIn bulk-import is scary fast, and the Ollama option keeps it completely free. Mac-only for now, Windows build “soon,” which could mean anything from next week to next year in open-source time.
ExPrysm bets on football so you don’t have to trust that guy on Reddit
There’s no shortage of tipsters who tweet screenshots of winning slips while quietly deleting the losers. ExPrysm publishes every pre-kickoff call—win, lose or heart-breaking 94-minute equaliser—across 300 leagues and eight markets. The ML stack (CatBoost + LLM pipeline) reruns nightly, then refreshes again when starting XIs drop. You can audit the ROI page right now; it’s refreshingly red as well as green. Freemium model gives you the match-winner model free; the corner and card prophets hide behind a cheap subscription. If you’re into quant football, it’s a living dataset. If you’re just chasing a Saturday acca, well, at least the AI is honest when it tanks.
Quick links if you want to poke around: