

Wonder Tools
Jeremy Caplan
Wonder Tools helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Building on one of Substack's most popular productivity newsletters, each episode of the podcast includes specific tips on how to make the most of these new tools to work creatively and productively. wondertools.substack.com
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 1, 2024 • 22min
📺 How to create video clips with AI
Kapwing is an excellent Web-based video editing tool. Its useful new AI features make it easy to convert a long video — like a Zoom recording, an interview, or a presentation— into short, shareable clips. Watch the video above — or on YouTube — to see Kapwing’s co-founder and CEO show me how to do that. Read on for how and why to easily create video clips with Kapwing’s AI, and some limitations and alternatives. Make social video clips with AIThe Kapwing feature I find most useful is Repurpose Studio. Video editing with Adobe Premiere or Final Cut Pro can be time consuming. If you’re creating short video clips for YouTube, Instagram, TikTok or LinkedIn, Kapwing and other new tools like Veed are easier and more efficient. Video demo: Watch an excerpt from my interview with Kapwing’s CEO for her 1-minute overview of how to use AI to create social video clips from a long video. How to create video clips with KapwingStep 1. Go to Kapwing’s Repurpose Studio. It’s a simplified special section of Kapwing’s Web-based video editor. Upload a video recording, like a 20-minute presentation or a 60-minute Zoom recording. Step 2. Wait a few minutes for processing. Kapwing uses AI to analyze the transcript for engaging material. It then suggests several clips, usually about a minute each. Preview the clips and pick one(s) you like. Step 3. Pick your preferred aspect ratio (wide or tall) depending on whether you’re planning to publish clips on YouTube, Instagram, or TikTok. Optionally tweak the visual style of the captions. Step 4. Export a clip you like, then upload it to a social platform like YouTube. Step 5. Optional: Open Kapwing’s full video editor to make additional changes to a clip before exporting it. You can adjust a clip’s start or end point to alter its length. You can also trim the video by deleting words, sentences or even whole sections from the AI-generated transcript. Step 6: Optional: Remove background noise. This step is crucial if you don’t have a dedicated microphone or if you’re uploading a noisy Zoom or conference recording. Descript is best for noise removal (see my fuller take), but Kapwing’s audio cleanup is also good.What to use Repurpose Studio for: Recordings people are unlikely to rewatch in full, like long panels or conference presentations. Clips can convey highlights efficiently. Normally, the editing would take hours. Now it can take minutes. What not to use it for: This won’t work well for silent videos or music videos. Caveats* Kapwing doesn’t yet upload directly to social or video platforms, so you have to export your video to your computer and then upload it to share.* For pro video editing features like keyframes, which let you add an effect to a video frame by frame, Kapwing isn’t as powerful as Final Cut Pro from Apple or Adobe Premiere.* AI transcription isn’t perfect. You’ll have to edit misunderstood words. In this post’s video, for example, “Kapwing” was transcribed occasionally as “Kipping” or “Kapling.” * Kapwing doesn’t yet generate video descriptions or chapter timecodes like Veed (see below), and it doesn’t yet suggest or create thumbnails. Hopefully in the future. Create a video in multiple languagesIf you’ve ever dreamed of being able to speak a new language, you might appreciate Kapwing’s AI dubbing. Record yourself in your native tongue. Then pick a language to dub yourself into. Video excerpt: Kapwing’s CEO on how AI enables translating your voice Kapwing lets you clone your own voice or use an AI-generated voice to narrate your video. The tech is from ElevenLabs, which has the leading voice AI models. You can then dub your video so it sounds like you (or an AI model) speaking any of 76 languages. You can also include translated captions. More on dubbing: Kapwing’s overview page and 3-minute how-to video. Caveats: Kapwing’s AI requires a paid subscription. It doesn’t yet work for group conversations. The advanced video editing interface can be overwhelming for novices at first. Expect translation glitches, as with any AI translation tool. Other AI features in KapwingYou can use AI in Kapwing to generate a video script, turn a script into a video, generate a meme, create a slideshow, generate an image, or turn an article or document into a video like this one, which I created by pasting in the text of this post into Kapwing’s AI video generator. PricingKapwing is free to test out to edit videos up to four minutes long, but they’ll have a watermark and be limited to 720p quality. And AI features are restricted, notably voice translation. It costs $192/year for full features, including AI capabilities. Educators and students can apply to use Kapwing for free.Partner MessageVolv is an app for high-performing individuals. It curates interesting content across the internet and delivers it in 9-second articles using AI so you can be updated without doom scrolling on social media. It's been featured on the Apple App Store and read by 60k+ users globally. Check it out for freeAlternatives: good AI-powered video editing toolsVeed is an excellent Web-based video editing tool with a simpler interface, similar pricing, and helpful AI features. It can auto-generate a YouTube video description and chapters. I’m planning a future post about Veed. Descript is a great tool for editing not just video, but also audio. AI features allow you to identify useful clips to share and remove background noise. Descript’s filler word removal feature seems to work a bit better than that of Kapwing. Hypernatural is a brand new useful AI-powered editing tool specifically for generating short video clips from audio or Zoom meetings. It uses AI to generate images suited to your audio, yielding short shareable video clips like this. Captions is an AI video editing tool that’s excellent for automated, cool-looking captions. You can also use it to translate videos of up to 5 minutes in your own dubbed voice. I’ve tried the iPhone, Web and Mac apps — Android is coming soon. Read more about the app: 👇I used Captions’ Mac app to clone my voice and translate my 90-second video about AI for educators. See how it turned out: versions in English🇺🇸; Italian 🇮🇹; Japanese🇯🇵; German🇩🇪; and Hindi🇮🇳. What do you think? Lipdub is a related free app from Captions.ai. Record short clips in one language and translate them into another. This 30-second demo video shows someone using Lipdub’s AI to simulate speaking a dozen languages. What’s your take on AI for video editing? Leave a comment 👇Update: Last week I wrote about one of my favorite survey tools, Tally. Here’s a quick summary of some of my initial takeaways from your responses to my survey asking for feedback on Wonder Tools: * A majority of readers who responded were in favor of me including more videos and, where relevant, including step-by-step guidance on tools. * There was also support for curated items, and for inviting occasional guest writers. If you’re interested in writing a guest post, reply to this post.* You had a great range of topic suggestions. I’ll draw on your ideas this year, noting your interest in AI and productivity tools. * I appreciate your input! It’s helpful as I plan for the year ahead. The feedback survey remains open so please still share your feedback! Thanks! p.s. Do you have your own project? This is the final week for applications to the 100-day online CUNY course I lead. Watch our open house video or visit the program page and apply. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wondertools.substack.com/subscribe

Jan 11, 2024 • 12min
How to make the most of ChatGPT in 2024 ⚡️
Explore the transformative power of ChatGPT in everyday tasks. Discover how to harness AI for enhanced creativity and productivity, from brainstorming to editing. Learn effective prompting techniques with the POP framework to get relevant responses. Understand when to use alternatives like Claude, Bing, and Bard. Dive into practical applications that can revolutionize your workflow. Whether in journalism or content creation, it's all about maximizing technology to enhance your output.

Jan 4, 2024 • 7min
🤩 My favorite ways to do ____ online
Finding reliable services online can be time-consuming. So to help you strengthen your digital toolkit for 2024, I’m sharing a six-minute take on 7 of my favorites. (Watch on YouTube or above in this post). My aim is to save you hours spent weeding out clunkers. Read on for my preferred tools for journaling, creative interactive documents, exploring the Web, making lists and more. Create interactive documentsCoda is useful for creating simple documents as well as complex project plans. It works just like Google Docs but with additional capabilities. You can embed videos, maps, social media posts, tables, diagrams and buttons. You can link Coda docs to Slack or other services you use to streamline your work. I use Coda to manage projects, organize meeting notes, and sometimes for handouts. The paid plans add helpful AI capabilities — you can chat with your documents.Coda Doc Examples: a revenue database and my free digital teaching toolkit. Read more on how I use Coda.Keep a simple journal Day One is the best simple, easy-to-use, free app for digital journaling. My favorite features: keeping separate personal, reading and work journals; adding audio, video and photos; emailing-in entries or adding them on my phone; getting a printed journal mailed every other year. Alternatives: Other good options include Grid Diary and Apple’s own new Journal app. Read more on why Day One is my favorite + my Medium post: 9 ways to journalExplore the web enjoyablyArc is my favorite browser. It’s clean, simple, and free. You can create separate spaces for distinct projects. I have one for each class I teach, and for my primary research interests. I also like its annotation features for screenshots. Here’s an example. I prefer its appearance and functionality to Chrome, Firefox or Safari with no tabs up top. Just a clean view of the site you're visiting. New AI features allow you to get a quick summary of any article or site you visit. Read more about the 9 most useful Arc features Share lists of your favoritesListy is a simple mobile app for making lists. Type in your picks and the app automatically pulls in related images, like book or album covers. You can share a link to your visual lists. Examples: Bill Gates’s favorite books, Rolling Stones’s best 100 albums. Read what I like about the simplicity of Listy. Listium is more powerful free service online for compiling lists you share and publish — favorite books, games, or whatever else. Examples: Things to do in Sydney and the 100 highest-rated comedies on Netflix. Alternative: Glide also works well for making and sharing lists as little apps, like my favorite podcasts or journalists and publishers on TikTok. Build a timeline for a presentationThe Knight Lab’s TimelineJS makes it easy to create a compelling, interactive timeline you can share online. Include text, photos, and embedded YouTube videos or Wikipedia entries. Examples: The history of wine and The life of Whitney Houston. The service isn’t new, but still works well. Great alternatives: BeeDocs 3D (Mac), Genially and Venngage all have stellar timeline templates. More on why I recommend TimelineJS and when to use each alternativeBrainstorm with your voice Oasis is a useful AI-powered app that records, transcribes and cleans up your short voice memos. It’s one of the most fruitful $5 a month subscriptions I pay for. I use it to get raw ideas out of my head to avoid the blank paper problem. I just ramble on into my Airpods for a few minutes as I walk around the park. Oasis magically transforms my verbage into a neat summary, a helpful outline, and drafts of a newsletter post, a video script, or whatever else I’m working on.Read why I rely on Oasis and six ways to use it Backup, organize and share photosGoogle Photos is a classic and remains my tool of choice for photo backup, search, sharing and printing. It’s faster and more flexible than Apple’s photo service, which I also use. I like being able to find any of my photos by typing in a name, place, or even a detail like “NYC,” “skiing,” or “pizza.” I use GPhotos to edit and share photos. I’ve even used it while teaching, having students create shared albums for a live photo sharing project. My wife orders printed family photo books twice a year and the quality is good.What are your go-to apps at the start of 2024? Leave a comment 👇p.s. Make something new this spring! You’re invited to apply to join the 2024 cohort of the Entrepreneurial Journalism Creators Program. This is the 100-day fully-online program I direct at the City Univ. of NY’s Newmark Grad School of Journalism. Participants join from all over the world at all career stages. RSVP to join a live open-house Jan 10. Read more and apply by Feb 2. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wondertools.substack.com/subscribe

Nov 16, 2023 • 44min
How I Use AI for Productivity ✍️
In this week’s Wonder Tools I’m experimenting with an audio post.Nikita Roy recently interviewed me for her Newsroom Robots podcast. I’m sharing the conversation with you to give you a window into the AI tools I find most useful with explanations of how and why I use them.During the conversation I share my AI experiments and thoughts on:* How Claude offers a powerful alternative to ChatGPT for long documents (~5:55 in the audio)* Why I tried Woebot & Personal.ai to stretch my thinking (~3:54)* My four Fs checklist for testing new AI tools (~20:45)Interview excerpt audiogram made with Hypernatural, an impressive new AI tool I’ll write about in a future post. https://youtu.be/FehWNSvpq2g?si=07l6U7kbE5LDn1hWTools used in making this audio post* Squadcast for recording the interview. (I also like Riverside.fm for recording)* Shure MV7 microphone* Adobe podcast for recording the opening supplemental audio clip* Audacity for merging audio clips* Hypernatural for generating the audiograms* Claude for identifying potentially interesting moments in the transcript* Substack for newsletter and audio delivery10 Takeaways on AI* Alternatives to ChatGPT are worth exploring. Personal.ai and Woebot are in a growing category of new AI assistants that can serve as conversational partners. They aim to provide comfort or companionship and to get to know you over time. Update: Woebot recently announced that its app will no longer be available after November 30, 2023. (~3:54 in the audio)* Claude’s superpower is ingesting giant texts I find Claude's ability to analyze large uploaded documents (up to 75,000 words) useful. I can have Claude summarize key points from a research paper to help me learn from it more efficiently. (~6:01)Below is the post I wrote about this: https://wondertools.substack.com/p/claude* I made a little French bot... I created a simple FrenchGuru language bot with Poe to explain French grammar and phrases. (~8:02)Other Poe bots I created you can use for free: - 6WordSummary sums up anything in six words- MemoryAid gives you a mnemonic device for whatever you want to recall.- BotanyBlair gives you interesting info about any plant + a two-line poem. - EthicalJourno responds to queries based on the ethical principles of the Society of Professional Journalists.Here’s the post I wrote about this: https://wondertools.substack.com/p/poe * AI can be useful as an experimental email assistant. The AI reviews my past writing to understand my style. When I lack time for a from-scratch response to every cold email, I can provide phrases and have Superhuman AI stitch together a draft, allowing me to spend time editing rather than composing all email from scratch. (~14:52)RSVP to join me on November 28 at 3pm ET for a live demo of Shortwave, another email tool incorporating AI creatively: https://lu.ma/novshortwave * Multimedia AI tools are worth exploring. Tools like Runway ML, Kapwing, and Descript use AI to streamline video editing and creation. Why I find Descript so useful: (~23:12)* AI tools should provide clearer guidance to users. Until recently, services like ChatGPT and Claude basically gave you a blank box and invited you to figure out what to do. (~25:20)* New AI tools like 4149.ai have creative features that can summarize classes and allow students to 'query' the AI with questions about session content. It's like having an assistant who memorized every word. (~31:40)* I use an AI app called Bloks to generate meeting summaries and notes on conference sessions. This allows me to focus on listening and thinking rather than manual note-taking. (~34:12) p.s. I also use and recommend Fathom (as a reader/friend you can skip the waitlist) for time-coded meeting summaries: https://fathom.video/invite/tq29sg * AI can eventually help provide more customized journalism education. I see AI as helpful for creating adaptive learning materials tailored to each student's language, culture, interests, and project work. (~36:16)* AI can reduce some of the sting of menial tasks. AI can help with manual tasks in the journalism workflow — like analyzing datasets, scanning notes to find mentions of a topic, and more. (~37:37)Join Nikita and me in an upcoming AI masterclass🔔 Introducing the Generative AI for Media Pros Masterclass A Wonder Tools + Newsroom Robots collaborationFind out more and sign up for one of the limited spots. It’s hands-on, small-cohort with one-on-one guidance: https://maven.com/nikita-roy/generative-ai-for-media-professionals I’ll co-lead this live cohort-based course alongside Nikita Roy, the journalist, data scientist, media entrepreneur and host of the Newsroom Robots podcast, who interviewed me for this audio post.Check out recent Wonder Tools posts on AI: https://wondertools.substack.com/t/ai … And check out the Newsroom Robots podcast for more from Nikita Roy: https://www.newsroomrobots.com/ I’d love your feedback on this audio post. Hit reply to reach me or email jeremy at jeremycaplan dot com. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wondertools.substack.com/subscribe

Oct 20, 2022 • 11min
Save time with 15-minute book summaries
Shortform gives you concise summaries of books you haven’t had time yet to read. In 15 minutes you’ll grasp a book’s core ideas. You can then decide to read the full book if it resonates. Shortform covers 30+ genres but focuses on business, tech, self-improvement, spirituality, history, and politics. My summary take: I appreciate the thorough, smart summaries weaving in ideas from related books, but given the alternatives, I wish more books were covered and that the app and site were more robust.Smart summariesThankfully the write-ups aren’t automated. Shortform hires smart people to read and reflect on these books. I find the summaries to be clear and well-written. Start with a one-minute quick guide for a book you’re curious about. Then optionally dig deeper with a 15-minute full summary.See how a book is connected to othersOne of the things I like best about Shortform is that the summaries tie together related books. I recently read the summary of Decisive, by Chip and Dan Heath, a book I read several years ago. I wanted a reminder about the key ideas. I appreciated the summary’s references to several other books on decision-making, from The Art of Choosing and The Paradox of Choice to Thinking in Bets and Thinking Fast and Slow. Other summary services focus on the book itself but don’t bring in parallel helpful references that show how a book fits into the broader field of thinking.Short activities to apply books’ ideasAnswer short questions the platform supplies within its summaries to apply the ideas in a book to your own life. In the Decisive summary, for example, I was prompted to consider an upcoming decision and to analyze various aspects through the lens of the book’s frameworks. As a teacher, I appreciate this extra step to help me retain the information and ideas.Mobile, Web and exportable highlightsI like reading the book summaries on my phone, but you can also read them on the Web. You can make highlights within a summary and sync these to Notion or Readwise. Here’s why I love Readwise for my book and online reading highlights.Articles, not just booksIn addition to book summaries Shortform publishes short explainers on diverse topics — from cryptocurrency to psychedelics. The summary pieces are smart, authoritative and reference numerous academic and media sources. But I don’t consider these to be comprehensive — they’re usually primers to help you get started on a topic.📖 2 brief excerpts from Shortform summariesSprint by Jake Knapp, John Zeratsky, and Braden KowitzElement #3: Building Your Team — “According to Knapp, Zeratksy, and Kowitz, your sprint team should have no more than seven members. Having more than seven hinders the decision-making process and makes it difficult to maintain the group's attention. Start by picking two essential roles, which they call the Decider and the Facilitator. For clarity, we'll call them the team leader and the sprint coordinator…“A World Without Email by Cal NewportOur Current Approach to Work: The Hyperactive Hive Mind Workflow — Newport argues that most knowledge workers structure their work days around responding to unscheduled emails and instant messages rather than around the knowledge work they were hired to do. A 2019 study showed that the average employee sent and received 126 emails a day, and another study showed that employees check their instant messenger app once a minute on average and their inboxes 77 times a day. A third study indicated that many knowledge workers can only perform about an hour of uninterrupted knowledge work a day. The rest of their day is spent responding to a barrage of incoming emails and messages…”Limitations and ConsiderationsLimited book selectionThe service is still young, so the library of summaries isn’t yet robust. Because they cover a wide range of subjects, no topic is comprehensively covered. And because they work methodically to create thoughtful summaries, the production process is slow. A handful of new books are added weekly. There are many books I’d love to have summaries of that aren’t available, both contemporary and classic. Shortform works best if you enjoy discovering new books, not just searching for specific book summaries.Opinionated writeupsThe summarizers aim to position each book among others. That results, sometimes, in summaries that are a blend of summary and analysis. In summarizing A World Without Email, the team omitted a section of the book about the history of email because they decided it wasn’t crucial to the book’s primary message. I generally don’t object to these excisions, because anyone summarizing has to make such decisions. But if you prefer a straightforward section-by-section textual summary with less independent analysis and fewer external references, you might prefer one of the alternatives below, like Headway or Uptime.Minimalist app and siteThe app and site are functional but simple. You can search for books and read summaries, but don’t expect much more. A neat audio feature means you can now listen to some of the summaries, but otherwise the app and site are basic. In comparison with the flashy visual summary apps below, Shortform is vanilla. But if you’re focused on depth of thought and analysis, the visuals may matter less.CostSummaries are expensive to produce, because humans make them and it takes lots of time to read deeply and write well. So Shortform costs $24/month, though they’ve agreed to a Wonder Tools reader discount, which brings the price down to $12.97/month for an annual subscription. For some people that’s still a lot, and other options below are cheaper.AlternativesBlinkist is the most famous of the summary services, claiming 23 million users, with an average rating of 4.76 stars after >100,000 app store reviews. A vast library means I was able to find summaries of many of the books by Alain de Botton, one of my favorite authors. And there’s some original learning material here, like an audio guide to slow productivity by YouTuber Rowena Tsai. Two other features I like: I can share my account free with a friend or family member. And I can send summaries straight to my Kindle. Cost: $100/yearHeadway This service’s visual explainers are its strength. Tap through a series of cards to grasp core book ideas or complex concepts. I like that the 15-minute book summaries are broken into 10 easy-to-digest cards, with short quotes pulled out as “insights” that you can save, share or add to your notebook in the app. Note that the summaries aren’t as thorough as Shortform’s at incorporating references to other books. The 39 question onboarding online is a bit too much. Cost: $60/yearUptime offers 5-minute “hacks” for getting a quick sense of books, podcasts, online courses, and documentaries. Like Headway, the app mixes in visuals in an appealing way, so you feel like you’re swiping through an educational Instagram, rather than reading dense text. You tap through screens just as you do on social platforms. You can switch audio on or off to listen to the summary. Occasionally a short video pops up, like a 30-second clip of author Mark Manson talking about concepts in his book, The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck. Cost: $56/year This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wondertools.substack.com/subscribe


