Tools That Exist Right Now
The AI landscape moves fast. New models launch constantly, benchmarks get broken monthly, and what was state-of-the-art six months ago is now the budget option. This module cuts through the noise and gives you a clear picture of what actually exists, what each tool does well, and how to choose between them.
The major language models
Language models are the category most people think of when they hear "AI" today. These are the systems you talk to, write with, and use to reason through problems. Here are the ones that matter.
Image generation tools
A completely different category — these models generate images from text descriptions rather than conversing in language.
Coding-specific tools
A category that's transforming software development faster than almost any other field.
How to choose the right tool
The honest answer is: use more than one. Different tools genuinely have different strengths, and the best AI users aren't loyal to a single platform — they know which tool fits which job.
| Task | Best choice | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Deep analysis or long documents | Claude | Strong reasoning, large context, careful with nuance |
| Current events or sourced research | Perplexity | Real-time web access with citations |
| Writing code | ChatGPT or Claude | Both are excellent; Claude excels at explaining, GPT at executing fast |
| Generating images | Midjourney | Highest visual quality for artistic work |
| Tasks inside Google Workspace | Gemini | Native integration with Gmail, Docs, Drive |
| General daily use | Claude or ChatGPT | Both handle most tasks well; personal preference applies |
None of these tools are magic and none are perfect. They all hallucinate. They all have knowledge cutoffs. They all make mistakes on tasks that seem simple. The difference between someone who uses AI effectively and someone who doesn't isn't which tool they chose — it's whether they understand how to work with these systems and when to verify what they produce.
The free vs. paid question
Every major AI tool has a free tier and a paid tier. The free tiers are genuinely useful for casual use. The paid tiers unlock more powerful models, higher usage limits, and additional features like image generation, web search, and file analysis.
If you're using AI seriously — for learning, for work, for building things — the paid tier of one tool is worth it. At $20/month, you get access to the most capable models available. For most people starting out, Claude Pro or ChatGPT Plus is the right first investment.