Free book cover mockups

From my own experience, it’s surprisingly hard to find a good mockup creator that’s truly free. Most sites claim to be free but add watermarks or require you to sign up. I’ve been using this 3D Book Cover Creator for a few years now, and it has always stayed free. If you think you might need one in the future, I’d suggest saving this now to save time later. — CD

DesignClaudia Dawson
Free Office software

There is really no reason to pay Microsoft for access to Office (renamed Microsoft 365). You can open, or generate, an Excel spreadsheet, Powerpoint presentation, or Word doc in free Google Drive with okay accuracy (PPT slides can be problematic). If you did need to maintain strict formatting beyond what Google can do, Microsoft now offers a free version of Office/Microsoft 365 on the web. You need a (free) Microsoft account. The web app seems to pretty identical to the standard paid versions of Excel, PowerPoint, and Word. — KK

Easy dashcam

I wanted a dashcam that was easy to use and install. The Redtiger F7NP is both. The included plastic pry tool let me neatly tuck the power cable under my car's trim. The cigarette lighter adapter has a built-in USB port so you don't lose your phone charging spot, and the 32GB memory card comes included (no separate purchase needed). The 4K front camera delivers crystal-clear video that makes license plates easily readable, even at night. You can view videos via phone or desktop app. (It comes with a rear camera, but I haven’t installed it yet.) — MF

AutoClaudia Dawson
How to find purpose

The purpose of your life is to discover the purpose of your life. If that sounds recursive, it is. No one has pushed harder on untangling that strange loop than Dan Pink, whose professional career has been trying to illuminate the way for ordinary folks to find their drive and purpose. He recently crafted a 10-minute video – How to Find Your Purpose – with clear, actionable steps you can take if stuck. I agree 100% with his approach and recommendations. They really help. — KK

LifeClaudia Dawson
Kagi Search Engine

I switched from Google to Kagi a couple of months ago and can't imagine going back. The results remind me of Google's golden age, before ads took over. The uncluttered ad-free interface delivers high-quality results without the SEO spam that plagues Google. It has tons of customization features I’m still learning about. It’s $10 a month, but having a search engine aligned with user experience rather than advertising revenue is worth it. — MF

SearchClaudia Dawson
Track your natural energy patterns

I took the advice from this LifeProTip and tracked my natural energy and focus patterns for a week to figure out when I’m most productive. For me, it’s after 1 PM. In the mornings, even though I do everything “right”—sitting out in the sun, sipping coffee, and exercising—I still usually feel energetically dispersed and have brain fog for the first half of the day. Instead of getting frustrated or trying to force myself to focus, I decided to shift my approach. Now, I work on tasks that don’t require much brainpower in the morning and save the more demanding ones for the afternoon. This one change has made me feel less shameful or frustrated with my natural patterns and more accomplished each day. — CD

Quiet, powerful hair dryer

My wife started using this CNMSGM hair dryer. Compared to her old dryer, it’s much quieter, more powerful, and lighter (under 1 pound). It features a smart LED ring that changes color to indicate temperature mode (red for hot, orange for warm, green for soft, and blue for cool). The two magnetic attachments snap on easily. Some users on Amazon mention that the power cord is a bit short, but I measured it, and it's 70 inches long, which is more than enough for our bathroom. — MF

BeautyClaudia Dawson
Invisible ring resizer

I love wearing rings, but my fingers are smaller than average and it’s really hard to find rings below a size 5, so I’m often disappointed when shopping for fashion jewelry. I finally found a solution with this Invisible Ring Spacer by Yiruhe. I coat the inside of the ring with a resin liquid that hardens in two minutes under UV light, repeating the process until the ring fits perfectly. It’s straightforward, and if you mess up or want to remove it, you can just run the ring under warm water and peel off the resin easily. My only complaint is the smell of the resin, so I’ve been resizing my rings outside. — CD

ClosetClaudia Dawson
Death clock

Part of the thrill of being alive is that we don’t know when we will die. However, I’ve found that knowing my statistical death age to be very clarifying, and it helps me focus on maximizing today. There’s a new AI-enhanced Death Clock that takes into account your lifestyle choices to give you a death date based on statistics. It’s quick and free on the web. Treat it as a hint rather than destiny. — KK

LifeClaudia Dawson
Auditing personal info on web

Google has made it easier to see what personal information about you is currently posted on the web. Go to the Results About You page at Google, and fill out the form. It will take several days to weeks before you get results back showing what the public web shows. For me about a dozen occurrences of my home and email address. You can ask Google to delete each instance, but it only deletes it from its search results and not the web. (For that you need to contact the site displaying it.) — KK

SecurityClaudia Dawson
Free audio transcription

Speech-to-Text by Borg is an automated transcription service with a generous free tier. You can upload MP3s up to 25MB (roughly 30 minutes of audio) and get fast, high-quality transcripts without paying a cent. They offer a paid tier at $0.06/hour for longer recordings. I use it for interviews, meeting notes, and voice memos. — MF

Compare yourself to others

Than Average is a small, “unscientific” investigation into how you compare yourself to others—for fun. Just answer the questions instinctively and see where you land in a room with 100 strangers. You can view all the questions and see how many people have answered them. I left my emotions and insecurities out of it, and found all the results interesting. — CD

CultureClaudia Dawson
Used stuff marketplace

Rather than trashing my old stuff, I like to find a new home for it, selling it or giving it away for free. The real action for used stuff has moved away from Craigslist to Facebook Marketplace. (The broadest reach is on eBay, but everything needs to be packaged for shipping.) Facebook Marketplace is the best for local and bulky things. It is a lot easier to use than Craigslist, and in my experience has 10 times the responses (for selling) or varieties (for buying). It is free to use. If you have patience you can find almost anything you want on Facebook Marketplace used, or get rid of almost anything you want with minimal hassle. — KK

ShoppingClaudia Dawson
Suction cup caddy

I needed a caddy for a newly tiled shower stall but was skeptical of suction-cup mounts, which in my experience always fail. The Hasko Shower Caddy changed my mind — it uses a knob-tightening mechanism that creates an incredibly strong hold on smooth tile. I installed it a month ago and it hasn't budged, even when loaded with heavy bottles and supplies. For rough surfaces, it includes adhesive mounting discs. — MF

Beginner’s Wood Whittling Kit

Through ACER, an online integration community I am part of, I occasionally host wood whittling sessions. I am not a detail-oriented person or particularly skilled with my hands, but I find it very soothing and meditative to shape and smooth out tree sticks, which I then glue crystals and feathers onto to create wands. My only tool is this beginner’s carving kit by BeaverCraft. I’ve used it for a year now, and the knives are still sharp and easy to hold. They’re helping to build my confidence to someday carve a figure. — CD

CraftsClaudia Dawson
Calendar of festivals

I try to coordinate my travel to exotic places with local festivals that occur at the same time. Trouble is, there’s been no easy way to find out which festivals are happening where. For example many traditional celebrations run on a lunar cycle. So I built a calendar that will show me all the festivals in Asia that are happening on a particular day. Or I can look at the map and see what festivals occur nearby and when. My site is called Festivo. It provides the local festivals of Asia—which are crammed with color, costumes, and traditions—in calendar format. It’s open and free to all, no ads. If enough people (besides myself) find it useful I will expand it to Europe, Africa, and the rest of the world. — KK

The Sound of Love

The website The Sound of Love offers a beautiful way to experience love songs. For four years, the creator collected comments found beneath love songs on YouTube, carefully selecting nostalgic and touching stories about longing, love, and loss. You can read these personal stories and memories here while you listen. There’s also a Spotify playlist featuring all the songs from The Sound of Love. (Discovered through Dense Discovery.) — CD

Wide zester

While I like my thin microplane for super-fine zesting, I use this wider grater from Allwin a lot more. The key difference is its curved blade profile — it really bites into whatever you're grating. The wider surface area also means you can get through a block of parmesan or a big knob of ginger much faster than with a traditional narrow microplane. — MF

KitchenClaudia Dawson
Contain your mess

My husband is the gardener of the family, and this Repotting Mat is his favorite gardening tool. It’s quick to snap together and contains all the soil mess when potting plants. He has two in different sizes. I imagine it would work well for keeping track of small parts too, if you’re working on other projects. — CD

GardenClaudia Dawson