Disclosure: I contribute to the OpenNomos ecosystem, where some of these projects are listed.
Every few months I go through my tools folder and delete things. Not because they're bad—most are genuinely well-made—but because I realize I haven't opened them in weeks.
The ones that survive the purge are the ones that do one thing and get out of the way.
Here are three that made the cut this quarter.
Paper List — Research Without the Noise
I used to dread literature reviews. Open Google Scholar, type a query, scroll through fifteen irrelevant papers, open five tabs, realize three are behind paywalls, close everything, try again with different keywords.
Paper List (paperlist.ai) changed that workflow completely. You type what you're researching, and it surfaces relevant papers. No complex query syntax. No manually filtering by year or citation count. Just results that match what you asked for.
The interface is the real differentiator. There's no dashboard with seventeen widgets, no "recommended for you" sidebar, no AI chatbot trying to summarize papers for you. The designer clearly understood that researchers don't need another dashboard—they need to find papers and get back to work.
Swipe Cleaner — A Photo App That Doesn't Want to Be Your Social Network
Phone storage fills up fast, especially when you take screenshots of everything. Most photo cleaner apps come bundled with editors, cloud backup subscriptions, and social sharing features I never asked for.
Swipe Cleaner is different. You open it, you swipe through your photos, you delete what you don't need. That's the entire feature set.
There's something almost radical about a mobile app that resists feature creep. No account required. No subscription upsell. No "share to community" button. Just a tool that does its job and closes.
OneZen — Meditation Without the Gamification
Meditation apps have gotten weird. Streak counters. Achievement badges. Leaderboards. Social sharing of your "mindfulness minutes." It's like someone decided inner peace needed a retention strategy.
OneZen asks you two questions: how long, and what sound. Then it starts a timer.
No login wall. No premium subscription. No notifications. No "your friend just meditated for 12 minutes!" push alerts. You pick a duration, pick a nature sound, and you're done.
What These Three Have in Common
None of them try to be platforms. None of them have social features. None of them ask for your email before showing you anything useful.
After years of trying every productivity tool that launches on Product Hunt, I've come to a simple conclusion: the best tools are the ones you forget you're using.
If a tool needs a tutorial, it's already lost. If it sends you a "we miss you" email, it's trying too hard. If it has more than three tabs in its navigation bar, someone in a meeting said "what if we also..."
Sometimes the best feature is restraint.
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