If you are anything like me, your brain is currently running on 1% battery, leftover caffeine, and the sheer panic of end-of-year deadlines.
We have performance reviews to write, "Advent of Code" puzzles to solve (or give up on), and portfolios to update for 2026. The last thing we want to do is spend hours on repetitive tasks.
So, I’ve curated a list of 10 AI tools that are actually useful (not just hype) to help you automate the boring stuff and survive until the holidays.
Let's get this done so we can go offline. ☕️
1. Phind / Perplexity (For Debugging)
Stop Googling error messages and scrolling past recipe blogs to find the answer. These search-focused AI tools are still the best for getting straight to the StackOverflow solution without the ads.
Why I use it: It saves me about 30 minutes of "tab hell" every day.
2. Blackbox AI (VS Code Extension)
If you are too lazy to write boilerplate code for your new 2026 side project, just comment what you want and let the autocomplete handle the rest.
Why I use it: Great for generating quick Python scripts or React components when my brain is foggy.
3. Textideo (For "I Hate Design" Moments)
Here is the scenario: You need to make a Year-End Presentation (PPT) for your boss, or you want to update your portfolio hero section, but you are a backend dev with zero design skills.
Textideo is basically a cheat code for visuals. Instead of searching stock photo sites for hours, you generate exactly what you need.
The Secret Weapon: If you want to look really fancy with zero effort, check out their
Kling 2.5 Model integration.
Why I use it: It generates cinematic video/motion backgrounds from text. I replaced my static portfolio background with a Kling 2.5 loop (Cyberpunk city vibe), and it looks like I hired a motion designer. It took 2 minutes.
4. Eraser.io (For Diagramming)
Docs-as-code is great, but sometimes you just need a diagram. Eraser lets you turn text/code into architecture diagrams instantly.
Why I use it: Explaining system architecture to non-technical PMs without drawing boxes manually.
5. Cron (Notion Calendar)
Okay, not purely generative AI, but the smart scheduling features save my sanity during the December meeting rush.
Why I use it: To block out "Focus Time" so people stop booking me for "quick syncs."
6. Warp Terminal
If you are still using a basic terminal, try Warp. The AI command search is a lifesaver when you forget that one tar or ffmpeg command (which is always).
Why I use it: I don't have to memorize CLI arguments anymore.
7. Tldraw (Make It Real)
Draw a UI on a whiteboard, and let AI turn it into working Tailwind code. It's magic for prototyping.
Why I use it: Rapid prototyping when I have an idea but don't want to open Figma.
8. Llama 3.2 (Local via Ollama)
For when you are working on sensitive data and can't use cloud AI. Running models locally has become surprisingly easy in late 2025.
Why I use it: Privacy-first coding assistance and checking for API key leaks.
9. Real-ESRGAN (Image Upscaler)
You have a low-res screenshot or an asset that looks pixelated on 4K monitors? This open-source AI upscaler fixes it instantly.
Why I use it: Making assets look crisp on high-DPI displays.
10. Brain.fm (AI Music)
Not a coding tool, but a survival tool. It uses AI to generate focus music.
Why I use it: It is the only thing that drowns out the holiday music playing in the office/café.
🎄 Final Thoughts
The goal for December isn't to work harder; it's to automate the friction.
Whether it is using Kling 2.5 to fake being a good designer, or Warp to fake being a CLI wizard, use the tools available to you.
Which tool is saving your life right now? Drop a comment below. 👇
(Happy coding, and see you in 2026!)
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