AI & Tech Newsletter Outreach Guide for Enovari
Table of Contents
0 itemsTier 1: Mega Newsletters (500K+ subscribers)
8 itemsSubmit via their website's "Submit a Tool" form; also responsive to Twitter DMs
Brief text blurb with a hyperlinked name — no full reviews or screenshots in the free editorial section. Paid sponsors get a more prominent block with an image/CTA above the fold.
Novelty, practical utility, ties to trending AI topics (e.g., if "AI memory" is in the news, Enovari becomes more relevant). Rowan personally curates and favors tools that solve a real, relatable problem.
Short email to Rowan or Twitter DM. He personally curates content and is very active on Twitter. Engage with his tweets first, then DM. Subject line should highlight what's unique about your tool.
Rowan frequently highlights tools that solve real problems for AI users. Enovari's memory angle is a great fit — frame it as solving the #1 frustration with AI assistants.
URL: https://www.therundown.ai Subscribers: ~600,000+ (one of the fastest-growing AI newsletters; likely higher by mid-2026) Who runs it: Rowan Cheung Frequency: Daily (weekdays) Publishes: Typically lands in inboxes 7-9 AM ET weekday mornings How to submit: Submit via their website's "Submit a Tool" form; also responsive to Twitter DMs Contact: rowan@therundown.ai | Twitter: @rowancheung Free or paid: Has both free editorial features and paid sponsorship placements Feature format: Short blurb (2-3 sentences) in a "Tools" or "Cool Tools" section; paid sponsors get a dedicated paragraph with CTA. Each issue typically covers 5-7 top AI news stories plus a curated tools section at the bottom. Tool features usually include the tool name as a hyperlink, a one-line description, and occasionally a screenshot. How tools are featured: Brief text blurb with a hyperlinked name — no full reviews or screenshots in the free editorial section. Paid sponsors get a more prominent block with an image/CTA above the fold. What makes them pick a tool: Novelty, practical utility, ties to trending AI topics (e.g., if "AI memory" is in the news, Enovari becomes more relevant). Rowan personally curates and favors tools that solve a real, relatable problem. How often they feature new products: Almost every issue includes 2-5 new tools in the curated section. Examples of tools featured: Perplexity AI, Midjourney updates, Cursor, Jasper, Copy.ai, Descript Best way to pitch: Short email to Rowan or Twitter DM. He personally curates content and is very active on Twitter. Engage with his tweets first, then DM. Subject line should highlight what's unique about your tool. When to pitch: Monday or Tuesday morning — he plans the week's content early. Pitch before 9 AM ET for same-week consideration. Priority: HIGH Notes: Rowan frequently highlights tools that solve real problems for AI users. Enovari's memory angle is a great fit — frame it as solving the #1 frustration with AI assistants.
Email submissions; also have a sponsorship inquiry form at https://tldr.tech/advertise. For editorial features, tweet at them or email.
Text-only blurb — a bold headline link, followed by 2-3 sentences. No screenshots. Brevity is the defining characteristic.
Clear developer utility, ties to trending tech topics, notable launches, open-source projects with GitHub traction. They especially like tools with a clear, tweetable one-liner.
Email with a very concise pitch (TLDR-style — they literally value brevity). Subject: "New AI Tool: [One-Line Hook]". They like developer tools with clear utility.
TLDR AI is the single highest-value target for Enovari. The audience is technical, AI-savvy, and exactly the developer demographic that would use an AI memory platform with MCP integration.
URL: https://tldr.tech Subscribers: ~1,250,000+ across all TLDR newsletters (flagship TLDR alone claims 1.25M+) Who runs it: Dan Ni (founder/CEO) Frequency: Daily (weekdays) Publishes: Early morning ET (typically 6-7 AM ET) Sub-newsletters: TLDR (main tech) — ~1.25M subscribers TLDR AI — ~500,000+ subscribers (THIS IS YOUR PRIMARY TARGET) TLDR Web Dev — ~350,000+ subscribers TLDR Founders — ~250,000+ subscribers TLDR DevOps — relevant for MCP integration angle TLDR Information Security — relevant if pitching the data privacy angle of user-controlled AI memory How to submit: Email submissions; also have a sponsorship inquiry form at https://tldr.tech/advertise. For editorial features, tweet at them or email. Contact: dan@tldr.tech (founder) | advertise@tldr.tech (sponsorships) | Twitter: @tlaboratory
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Free or paid: Editorial features are free but competitive; paid sponsorships available ($$). TLDR AI sponsorship runs ~$3,000-8,000+ per placement depending on format.
Feature format: Short 2-3 sentence blurb in curated sections like "Launches & Tools" or "Research." Each issue has 8-12 items organized into categories (Headlines, Launches, Research, Tools). Paid placements are a dedicated block at the top or middle of the newsletter.
How tools are featured: Text-only blurb — a bold headline link, followed by 2-3 sentences. No screenshots. Brevity is the defining characteristic.
What makes them pick a tool: Clear developer utility, ties to trending tech topics, notable launches, open-source projects with GitHub traction. They especially like tools with a clear, tweetable one-liner.
How often they feature new products: Every issue features 3-5 tools/launches in the dedicated section.
Examples of tools featured: Vercel AI SDK, LangChain updates, OpenAI releases, Anthropic launches, Replit, Linear
Best way to pitch: Email with a very concise pitch (TLDR-style — they literally value brevity). Subject: "New AI Tool: [One-Line Hook]". They like developer tools with clear utility.
When to pitch: Sunday evening or Monday morning for same-week consideration. Their editorial calendar fills fast.
Priority: HIGH (especially TLDR AI and TLDR Web Dev)
Notes: TLDR AI is the single highest-value target for Enovari. The audience is technical, AI-savvy, and exactly the developer demographic that would use an AI memory platform with MCP integration.[VERIFY] — Ben shifted the newsletter format significantly in late 2024/early 2025. The daily newsletter was scaled back, and Ben pivoted toward building AI products/community tools (including "Ben's Bites News" aggregator site and a focus on AI app building). The newsletter may now be less frequent or reformatted.[VERIFY current publishing schedule] — historically, Monday or Tuesday for same-week consideration.Submit tools via their website or email Ben directly. He also has a "Ben's Bites News" community.
Ben is a maker/builder himself. He respects tools that are genuinely useful, actually work, and aren't vaporware. Show him a working product with a clear use case. He is skeptical of hype.
Direct email to Ben or Twitter DM. Ben is very approachable and personally curates. Show him a working product with a clear use case.
Ben has evolved the newsletter over time — check the current format before pitching. He shifted toward more analysis, community content, and product building. The "tools" section was historically a core feature. Ben is a maker himself, so he respects builders. If the newsletter has been wound down, Ben's Twitter presence (200K+ followers) is still valuable for visibility.
URL: https://bensbites.com (also https://bensbites.beehiiv.com for the newsletter archive) Subscribers: ~500,000+ (was one of the first major AI newsletters) Who runs it: Ben Tossell Frequency:
[VERIFY] — Ben shifted the newsletter format significantly in late 2024/early 2025. The daily newsletter was scaled back, and Ben pivoted toward building AI products/community tools (including "Ben's Bites News" aggregator site and a focus on AI app building). The newsletter may now be less frequent or reformatted.
How to submit: Submit tools via their website or email Ben directly. He also has a "Ben's Bites News" community.
Contact: ben@bensbites.com | Twitter: @bentossell
Free or paid: Editorial features are free; they also have a paid community and sponsorships
Feature format: Historically: short blurbs with links in curated sections, with Ben adding his own commentary and a "Top Tools" section. Current format may differ — check recent issues before pitching.
How tools are featured: Historically a hyperlinked tool name with 1-2 sentence commentary from Ben. More personal/opinionated than TLDR.
What makes them pick a tool: Ben is a maker/builder himself. He respects tools that are genuinely useful, actually work, and aren't vaporware. Show him a working product with a clear use case. He is skeptical of hype.
How often they feature new products: Historically, 5-10 tools per issue in the curated section.
Examples of tools featured: ChatGPT plugins, Poe, Character.AI, Stability AI tools, Hugging Face updates, Runway ML
Best way to pitch: Direct email to Ben or Twitter DM. Ben is very approachable and personally curates. Show him a working product with a clear use case.
When to pitch: [VERIFY current publishing schedule] — historically, Monday or Tuesday for same-week consideration.
Priority: HIGH (but verify the newsletter is still active in its original format)
Notes: Ben has evolved the newsletter over time — check the current format before pitching. He shifted toward more analysis, community content, and product building. The "tools" section was historically a core feature. Ben is a maker himself, so he respects builders. If the newsletter has been wound down, Ben's Twitter presence (200K+ followers) is still valuable for visibility.Email Zain directly or reach out via Twitter/LinkedIn DM
The "Tool of the Day" gets a dedicated box with a screenshot/image, the tool name, a 2-3 sentence description, and a direct link. This is significantly more visual than TLDR or The Rundown.
Mass appeal, visual demos, clear before/after use cases, productivity focus. Zain's audience is more business-professional than developer, so tools that "make work easier" resonate more than technical architecture.
Twitter DM or email. Zain is very active on LinkedIn and Twitter. Engage with his content first. He likes tools with mass appeal and clear before/after demonstrations.
Superhuman AI skews slightly more toward business/productivity users than pure developers. Frame Enovari as "making AI actually useful long-term" rather than focusing on MCP technical details. The "your AI forgets everything" hook is perfect for this audience.
URL: https://www.superhuman.ai Subscribers: ~800,000+ (one of the largest AI newsletters by subscriber count) Who runs it: Zain Kahn Frequency: Daily (weekdays) Publishes: Morning ET, typically 7-8 AM ET How to submit: Email Zain directly or reach out via Twitter/LinkedIn DM Contact: zain@superhuman.ai | Twitter: @heyzain | LinkedIn: Zain Kahn Free or paid: Free editorial features; paid sponsorships available Feature format: "Tool of the Day" or "AI Tools" section — typically a short paragraph with a screenshot and link. Very visual format. A typical issue opens with a main AI news story (2-3 paragraphs), followed by 3-5 curated news items, then a "Tool of the Day" box with an image, and finally quick-hit links. How tools are featured: The "Tool of the Day" gets a dedicated box with a screenshot/image, the tool name, a 2-3 sentence description, and a direct link. This is significantly more visual than TLDR or The Rundown. What makes them pick a tool: Mass appeal, visual demos, clear before/after use cases, productivity focus. Zain's audience is more business-professional than developer, so tools that "make work easier" resonate more than technical architecture. How often they feature new products: Every issue features 1 "Tool of the Day" plus 2-3 additional tool mentions. Examples of tools featured: ChatGPT features, Notion AI, Gamma, Opus Clip, ElevenLabs, Synthesia, Pictory Best way to pitch: Twitter DM or email. Zain is very active on LinkedIn and Twitter. Engage with his content first. He likes tools with mass appeal and clear before/after demonstrations. When to pitch: Tuesday-Wednesday for same-week feature. Zain plans content 2-3 days ahead. Priority: HIGH Notes: Superhuman AI skews slightly more toward business/productivity users than pure developers. Frame Enovari as "making AI actually useful long-term" rather than focusing on MCP technical details. The "your AI forgets everything" hook is perfect for this audience.
Submit via their website or email. They have a submission process for tools.
Hyperlinked name with a 1-2 sentence description in the tools section. Major launches may get a dedicated paragraph higher up in the newsletter.
Ties to current AI news cycles, practical utility, notable launches. They appreciate tools that fit into a narrative they're already covering.
URL: https://www.theneurondaily.com Subscribers: ~500,000+ Who runs it: Noah Edelman, Pete Huang Frequency: Daily (weekdays) Publishes: Morning ET How to submit: Submit via their website or email. They have a submission process for tools. Contact: hello@theneurondaily.com | Twitter: @pete_huang
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Free or paid: Both free editorial and paid sponsorships
Feature format: Short blurb in their "Tools & Links" section; sometimes longer feature pieces for significant launches. A typical issue has a main story (3-4 paragraphs), 3-4 secondary news items, a sponsored section, and a "Tools & Links" section at the bottom with 3-5 curated items.
How tools are featured: Hyperlinked name with a 1-2 sentence description in the tools section. Major launches may get a dedicated paragraph higher up in the newsletter.
What makes them pick a tool: Ties to current AI news cycles, practical utility, notable launches. They appreciate tools that fit into a narrative they're already covering.
How often they feature new products: 3-5 tools per issue in the curated section.
Examples of tools featured: Google Gemini, Claude updates, Stable Diffusion tools, AI coding assistants, Notion AI
Best way to pitch: Email with a clear, concise pitch. They appreciate tools that tie into broader AI trends they're covering.
When to pitch: Monday-Tuesday for same-week editorial. Pitch with a news hook tied to something they recently covered.
Priority: HIGHEmail or submit through their website. They have a tool submission process.
The "Tool of the Day" gets a full mini-review: what it does, who it's for, key features, screenshot, and a direct link. This is one of the most detailed free editorial features available. Secondary mentions are 1-2 sentences with a link.
Practical utility, clear use cases, something their audience can try immediately. They prioritize tools that are accessible (not enterprise-only or waitlisted).
Email with a clear explanation of what the tool does, who it's for, and why it's different. They like practical AI tools with clear use cases.
Despite the name suggesting just "reports," this newsletter actively features new tools. Very strong fit for Enovari since the audience specifically seeks AI tools.
URL: https://aitoolreport.com Subscribers: ~550,000+ (has grown rapidly; arguably belongs in Tier 1) Who runs it: Mike Cardona Frequency: Daily (weekdays) Publishes: Morning, typically 8-9 AM ET How to submit: Email or submit through their website. They have a tool submission process. Contact: mike@aitoolreport.com | Twitter: @aitoolreport
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Free or paid: Free editorial features; paid placements available
Feature format: Dedicated "Tool of the Day" with a mini-review (2-4 paragraphs). Also features tools in a curated list format. A typical issue has a "Tool of the Day" (with screenshot, description, use cases, and link), followed by 3-5 "More Tools" quick mentions, plus AI news.
How tools are featured: The "Tool of the Day" gets a full mini-review: what it does, who it's for, key features, screenshot, and a direct link. This is one of the most detailed free editorial features available. Secondary mentions are 1-2 sentences with a link.
What makes them pick a tool: Practical utility, clear use cases, something their audience can try immediately. They prioritize tools that are accessible (not enterprise-only or waitlisted).
How often they feature new products: 1 "Tool of the Day" + 3-5 additional mentions per issue.
Examples of tools featured: Perplexity, Jasper, Copy.ai, Descript, Runway, Otter.ai
Best way to pitch: Email with a clear explanation of what the tool does, who it's for, and why it's different. They like practical AI tools with clear use cases.
When to pitch: Monday-Wednesday for same-week feature. Send early morning.
Priority: HIGH
Notes: Despite the name suggesting just "reports," this newsletter actively features new tools. Very strong fit for Enovari since the audience specifically seeks AI tools.Their tech vertical covers AI regularly. Pitch to tech editors. They also run "Emerging Tech Brew" as a dedicated sub-newsletter.
Brief mention within a news story — not a dedicated "tool of the day." You'd be woven into a narrative, e.g., "startups like Enovari are tackling the AI memory problem."
Strong news hooks, trend pieces, funding announcements, notable milestones. They cover business-relevant tech, not niche developer tools.
URL: https://www.morningbrew.com Subscribers: ~4,000,000+ (across all Morning Brew newsletters) Who runs it: Morning Brew (Alex Lieberman, Austin Rief founders; now large editorial team) Frequency: Daily Publishes: 6 AM ET How to submit: Their tech vertical covers AI regularly. Pitch to tech editors. They also run "Emerging Tech Brew" as a dedicated sub-newsletter. Contact: tips@morningbrew.com | They also run "Emerging Tech Brew" Free or paid: Free editorial; paid sponsorships available (expensive — $50K+) Feature format: Mentions within daily newsletter, usually tied to a news hook. Emerging Tech Brew does deeper dives on AI/tech topics. How tools are featured: Brief mention within a news story — not a dedicated "tool of the day." You'd be woven into a narrative, e.g., "startups like Enovari are tackling the AI memory problem." What makes them pick a tool: Strong news hooks, trend pieces, funding announcements, notable milestones. They cover business-relevant tech, not niche developer tools. How often they feature new products: Rarely as standalone features; tools appear within broader stories. Best way to pitch: Need a strong news hook or trend piece. "Why AI can't remember anything — and the startup fixing it" angle. When to pitch: Pitch news to tips@morningbrew.com any time a newsworthy event happens (funding round, major milestone, partnership). Priority: LOW-MEDIUM (very broad audience, hard to get, but massive reach)
Launch your product on Product Hunt. The top daily products get featured in the digest email sent to all subscribers.
It's algorithmic/community-driven — upvotes determine ranking. But PH editors also curate "featured" products. Strong visuals, compelling tagline, founder engagement in comments, and early upvote momentum matter most.
This is a platform launch, not a pitch. Prepare a PH launch with: great tagline, compelling screenshots/video, early upvoters, founder engagement in comments. Schedule for a Tuesday-Thursday for best results.
Launch at 12:01 AM PT (when the new day begins on PH). Tuesday-Thursday are the best days. Avoid holidays and days when major companies are launching.
Product Hunt is a must-do for Enovari, but it deserves its own strategy document. The daily digest newsletter is just one benefit of launching — you also get SEO, backlinks, social proof, and the "Featured on Product Hunt" badge. See the dedicated PH launch playbook.
URL: https://www.producthunt.com (newsletter settings in your PH account) Subscribers: ~1,000,000+ email subscribers (Product Hunt's total user base is much larger) Who runs it: Product Hunt (now part of the a16z portfolio) Frequency: Daily digest email Publishes: Digest goes out in the evening, summarizing the day's top launches How to submit: Launch your product on Product Hunt. The top daily products get featured in the digest email sent to all subscribers. Contact: Not applicable — you launch on the platform. For support: support@producthunt.com Free or paid: Free to launch; you can optionally use Product Hunt's paid promotion tools Feature format: Your product gets a card with name, tagline, description, screenshots, upvote count. Top 5 daily products get the most visibility in the digest. How tools are featured: Product card format: logo, name, tagline, upvote count, and a link. Top products get larger cards with screenshots. What makes them pick a tool: It's algorithmic/community-driven — upvotes determine ranking. But PH editors also curate "featured" products. Strong visuals, compelling tagline, founder engagement in comments, and early upvote momentum matter most. How often they feature new products: Every single day — it's entirely about new products. Examples of tools featured: Every major tech product launches here — Linear, Notion updates, Figma plugins, Arc Browser, every AI tool imaginable Best way to pitch: This is a platform launch, not a pitch. Prepare a PH launch with: great tagline, compelling screenshots/video, early upvoters, founder engagement in comments. Schedule for a Tuesday-Thursday for best results. When to pitch: Launch at 12:01 AM PT (when the new day begins on PH). Tuesday-Thursday are the best days. Avoid holidays and days when major companies are launching. Priority: HIGH (but this is a launch event, not a newsletter pitch — plan it separately) Notes: Product Hunt is a must-do for Enovari, but it deserves its own strategy document. The daily digest newsletter is just one benefit of launching — you also get SEO, backlinks, social proof, and the "Featured on Product Hunt" badge. See the dedicated PH launch playbook.
Tier 2: Major Newsletters (100K-500K subscribers)
12 items[VERIFY]Email or Twitter DM to Lior
Brief text blurb with a link. Very curated — being included means the tool passed a high bar. No screenshots or full reviews.
Technical innovation, GitHub stars/traction, ties to research trends, open-source components. Lior values technical depth over marketing polish.
Technical pitch focusing on the architecture and innovation behind Enovari. Lior values technical depth. Mention MCP integration, the memory architecture, how it works under the hood.
AlphaSignal's audience is highly technical — developers, researchers, ML engineers. This is a perfect audience for Enovari's MCP integration angle. Pitch the technical innovation, not just the product.
URL: https://alphasignal.ai Subscribers: ~300,000+ Who runs it: Lior Grossman Frequency: Weekly (typically mid-week) Publishes: Wednesday or Thursday
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How to submit: Email or Twitter DM to Lior
Contact: Twitter: @AlphaSignalAI, @laborat [VERIFY handle] | Email available via website
Free or paid: Free editorial features
Feature format: Curated list of AI research, tools, and launches with brief descriptions. More research/technical focused. A typical issue has 10-15 items organized into sections: trending repos, research papers, tools, and launches. Each item gets a title, 1-2 sentence description, and a link.
How tools are featured: Brief text blurb with a link. Very curated — being included means the tool passed a high bar. No screenshots or full reviews.
What makes them pick a tool: Technical innovation, GitHub stars/traction, ties to research trends, open-source components. Lior values technical depth over marketing polish.
How often they feature new products: 3-5 tools per weekly issue.
Examples of tools featured: Open-source models, research papers, GitHub repos, developer tools like LangChain, LlamaIndex
Best way to pitch: Technical pitch focusing on the architecture and innovation behind Enovari. Lior values technical depth. Mention MCP integration, the memory architecture, how it works under the hood.
When to pitch: Monday-Tuesday for same-week inclusion (Wednesday/Thursday publish).
Priority: HIGH (very aligned audience)
Notes: AlphaSignal's audience is highly technical — developers, researchers, ML engineers. This is a perfect audience for Enovari's MCP integration angle. Pitch the technical innovation, not just the product.Very editorial — you can't easily "submit" a tool. Best to get covered through noteworthy launches, press, or by being featured in the AI community.
Woven into news/analysis — not a dedicated tool section. Being mentioned here means you're part of a bigger story about an AI trend.
Significant traction, novel technical approach, ties to AI education or research trends. They don't feature "yet another AI tool" — you need to be part of a notable trend or breakthrough.
Very hard to get featured unless you have significant traction or a novel technical approach. Best angle: pitch Enovari as part of a trend piece on "AI memory" or "persistent context." Get on their radar through DeepLearning.AI community.
The Batch is more news/analysis than tool discovery. A feature here signals serious credibility. Consider this a long-term target once Enovari has more traction.
URL: https://www.deeplearning.ai/the-batch/ Subscribers: ~300,000+ (Andrew Ng's massive following) Who runs it: Andrew Ng and the DeepLearning.AI team Frequency: Weekly (Wednesday) Publishes: Wednesday morning How to submit: Very editorial — you can't easily "submit" a tool. Best to get covered through noteworthy launches, press, or by being featured in the AI community. Contact: thebatch@deeplearning.ai | Twitter: @AndrewYNg Free or paid: Free editorial only (they don't do paid tool placements in the traditional sense) Feature format: In-depth analysis pieces, news roundups, and sometimes tool/product mentions within broader trend pieces. A typical issue has Andrew Ng's personal letter (2-3 paragraphs on a theme), followed by 5-6 curated AI news stories with summaries and commentary. Tool mentions appear within news stories, not as a standalone section. How tools are featured: Woven into news/analysis — not a dedicated tool section. Being mentioned here means you're part of a bigger story about an AI trend. What makes them pick a tool: Significant traction, novel technical approach, ties to AI education or research trends. They don't feature "yet another AI tool" — you need to be part of a notable trend or breakthrough. How often they feature new products: Rarely as standalone; 1-2 product mentions per issue within broader stories. Examples of tools featured: Major launches only — GPT-4, Claude, Gemini, significant open-source releases, research breakthroughs Best way to pitch: Very hard to get featured unless you have significant traction or a novel technical approach. Best angle: pitch Enovari as part of a trend piece on "AI memory" or "persistent context." Get on their radar through DeepLearning.AI community. When to pitch: No specific deadline — they plan weeks ahead. Pitch anytime, but don't expect fast turnaround. Priority: MEDIUM (aspirational — hard to get in, but massive credibility if you do) Notes: The Batch is more news/analysis than tool discovery. A feature here signals serious credibility. Consider this a long-term target once Enovari has more traction.
Email Jack directly; he curates personally
Mentioned within Jack's analysis — never a standalone "tool of the day." If featured, expect a thoughtful paragraph about why the tool matters in the context of AI progress/safety.
Broader implications for AI safety, policy, and societal impact. Pure product pitches won't work. You need to frame your tool in terms of what it means for AI's trajectory.
Typically covers research papers, policy developments, major platform launches. Less "tool of the day" and more analytical.
Email Jack with a focus on the broader implications of persistent AI memory. He cares about AI safety, policy, and societal impact. Frame Enovari as addressing a fundamental limitation of current AI systems.
Import AI readers are senior AI researchers, policymakers, and industry leaders. Getting featured here is a credibility signal. Pitch the vision, not just the product.
URL: https://importai.substack.com (also https://jack-clark.net) Subscribers: ~150,000+ Who runs it: Jack Clark (co-founder of Anthropic, former OpenAI policy director) Frequency: Weekly (Monday) Publishes: Monday How to submit: Email Jack directly; he curates personally Contact: jack@jack-clark.net | Twitter: @jackclarkSF Free or paid: Free editorial only (no paid placements) Feature format: Long-form essay format with curated links and analysis. Technical and policy focused. Each issue typically has 5-7 items: research paper summaries, policy developments, industry news, and occasionally tool/product mentions. Jack writes substantial commentary (paragraph-length) for each item. How tools are featured: Mentioned within Jack's analysis — never a standalone "tool of the day." If featured, expect a thoughtful paragraph about why the tool matters in the context of AI progress/safety. What makes them pick a tool: Broader implications for AI safety, policy, and societal impact. Pure product pitches won't work. You need to frame your tool in terms of what it means for AI's trajectory. How often they feature new products: Rarely — maybe 1 product mention every 2-3 issues, always within a bigger analysis. Examples of tools featured: Typically covers research papers, policy developments, major platform launches. Less "tool of the day" and more analytical. Best way to pitch: Email Jack with a focus on the broader implications of persistent AI memory. He cares about AI safety, policy, and societal impact. Frame Enovari as addressing a fundamental limitation of current AI systems. When to pitch: Thursday-Friday for the following Monday's issue. Priority: MEDIUM (prestige target, very selective) Notes: Import AI readers are senior AI researchers, policymakers, and industry leaders. Getting featured here is a credibility signal. Pitch the vision, not just the product.
Email or submit through their site. They actively look for new tools.
Hyperlinked name with 1-2 sentence description. Occasionally includes a small screenshot for visually interesting tools.
URL: https://aibreakfast.beehiiv.com Subscribers: ~150,000+ Who runs it: Community-driven editorial team Frequency: Daily or multiple times per week Publishes: Morning (as the name suggests) How to submit: Email or submit through their site. They actively look for new tools. Contact: Via website contact form | Twitter: @aibreakfast
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Free or paid: Free editorial features; paid sponsorships available
Feature format: Short blurbs in curated tool sections, sometimes with screenshots. A typical issue has a main story, 3-4 news items, and a "Tools" section with 3-5 entries.
How tools are featured: Hyperlinked name with 1-2 sentence description. Occasionally includes a small screenshot for visually interesting tools.
What makes them pick a tool: Accessibility, practical utility, novelty. They feature a broad range — from enterprise tools to indie projects.
How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue.
Examples of tools featured: ChatGPT plugins, Midjourney tools, AI writing assistants, productivity tools
Best way to pitch: Email with a clear, short pitch. They are relatively accessible and feature a wide range of tools.
When to pitch: Anytime; they publish frequently and have a rolling editorial calendar.
Priority: MEDIUM-HIGH[VERIFY frequency]Submit your tool to the directory at https://theresanaiforthat.com/submit/ — tools featured in the directory often get picked up for the newsletter
In the directory: a card with name, description, and category. In the newsletter: trending/new tools from the directory get highlighted with slightly more description. The directory itself is the primary value — it ranks well in Google for "AI tool for [X]" queries.
Submission completeness, category relevance, upvotes/saves from the community, and novelty. Make sure your listing is complete, well-categorized, and has a clear description.
Thousands of AI tools across every category — ChatGPT alternatives, writing tools, image generators, developer tools, productivity tools
Submit to the directory first. Make sure your listing is compelling. The newsletter often features trending tools from the directory, so getting upvotes/traction on the listing helps.
This is both a directory AND a newsletter. The directory itself gets massive organic search traffic. Submit Enovari to the directory under categories like "Developer Tools," "AI Memory," "Productivity." This is one of the easiest high-impact submissions you can make.
URL: https://theresanaiforthat.com Subscribers: ~300,000+ (newsletter) + massive website traffic (millions of monthly visits) Who runs it: Community-maintained directory + newsletter Frequency: Regular newsletter + continuously updated directory Publishes: Newsletter goes out weekly
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How to submit: Submit your tool to the directory at https://theresanaiforthat.com/submit/ — tools featured in the directory often get picked up for the newsletter
Contact: Via website submission form
Free or paid: Free to submit to directory; paid for premium placement/sponsorship
Feature format: Tool listing in directory (name, description, category, link) + newsletter features top/trending tools. The directory listing includes: tool name, one-line description, category tags, pricing info, a link, and a save/upvote count.
How tools are featured: In the directory: a card with name, description, and category. In the newsletter: trending/new tools from the directory get highlighted with slightly more description. The directory itself is the primary value — it ranks well in Google for "AI tool for [X]" queries.
What makes them pick a tool: Submission completeness, category relevance, upvotes/saves from the community, and novelty. Make sure your listing is complete, well-categorized, and has a clear description.
How often they feature new products: The directory adds tools continuously. The newsletter highlights 5-10 trending tools per issue.
Examples of tools featured: Thousands of AI tools across every category — ChatGPT alternatives, writing tools, image generators, developer tools, productivity tools
Best way to pitch: Submit to the directory first. Make sure your listing is compelling. The newsletter often features trending tools from the directory, so getting upvotes/traction on the listing helps.
When to pitch: Submit to directory anytime — it's always-on. For newsletter consideration, there's no specific deadline.
Priority: HIGH (the directory listing alone drives significant traffic)
Notes: This is both a directory AND a newsletter. The directory itself gets massive organic search traffic. Submit Enovari to the directory under categories like "Developer Tools," "AI Memory," "Productivity." This is one of the easiest high-impact submissions you can make.[VERIFY] — typically mid-weekEmail submission or through website
URL: https://aiweekly.co Subscribers: ~100,000+ Who runs it: Editorial team (previously associated with various AI communities) Frequency: Weekly Publishes:
[VERIFY] — typically mid-week
How to submit: Email submission or through website
Contact: Via website | Twitter presence
Free or paid: Free editorial
Feature format: Curated list of top AI news, tools, and research from the week. Each item gets a headline and 1-2 sentence description.
How tools are featured: Brief blurb in a curated list — headline + 1-2 sentences + link.
What makes them pick a tool: Newsworthiness, ties to the week's AI narrative.
How often they feature new products: 3-5 tools per weekly issue.
Examples of tools featured: Broad range of AI tools, research papers, and launches
Best way to pitch: Email with a concise pitch focusing on what makes the tool newsworthy this week. Tie into current AI trends.
When to pitch: Monday-Tuesday for same-week inclusion.
Priority: MEDIUMEmail Lenny or reach out on Twitter. He occasionally features tools in his "What I've been using" sections.
Organic mention within an essay — never a standalone feature. If Lenny mentions your tool, it carries enormous weight because it's clearly a genuine endorsement.
Lenny has to personally use and like the tool. You can't pitch your way into this — he has to discover it or be genuinely intrigued. Offering early access or a personalized demo is the best path.
Frame Enovari as a product/growth case study. Lenny loves stories about building products. Offer him an exclusive look or early access.
URL: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com (Substack) Subscribers: ~700,000+ (one of the biggest product/growth newsletters — arguably Tier 1 by subscriber count, but placed here because it's not primarily an AI tools newsletter) Who runs it: Lenny Rachitsky (former Airbnb PM) Frequency: Weekly (paid) + free posts Publishes: Tuesday (paid), additional free posts throughout the week How to submit: Email Lenny or reach out on Twitter. He occasionally features tools in his "What I've been using" sections. Contact: lenny@substack.com | Twitter: @lennysan Free or paid: Free editorial mentions; he's very selective. He also has a podcast. Feature format: Mentions within larger essays about product, growth, and AI. Not a "tool of the day" format. A typical issue is a long-form essay (2,000-4,000 words) about product management, growth, or tech culture. Tool mentions are embedded naturally within the essay, e.g., "I've been using X for Y and it's changed how I work." How tools are featured: Organic mention within an essay — never a standalone feature. If Lenny mentions your tool, it carries enormous weight because it's clearly a genuine endorsement. What makes them pick a tool: Lenny has to personally use and like the tool. You can't pitch your way into this — he has to discover it or be genuinely intrigued. Offering early access or a personalized demo is the best path. How often they feature new products: Irregularly — maybe 1-2 tool mentions per month, always organic. Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari as a product/growth case study. Lenny loves stories about building products. Offer him an exclusive look or early access. When to pitch: No specific timing — build a relationship first. Priority: MEDIUM (not primarily an AI tools newsletter, but massive reach among builders)
Email or social media outreach
URL: https://theaiexchange.com
[VERIFY — may have changed or been rebranded]
Subscribers: ~100,000+
Who runs it: [VERIFY] — previously attributed to various creators. Note: Shawn Wang (swyx) runs Latent Space and AINEWS, not The AI Exchange. This attribution should be verified.
Frequency: Multiple times per week
How to submit: Email or social media outreach
Contact: Via website
Free or paid: Free editorial features
Feature format: Curated AI news, tools, and analysis
How tools are featured: Short blurbs in curated sections.
What makes them pick a tool: Novelty, practical utility.
How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue.
Best way to pitch: Email with a concise technical pitch.
When to pitch: Rolling basis.
Priority: MEDIUM-HIGHPR/press pitch to the editorial team
Woven into journalistic stories — not a tool directory. You'd be covered as news, e.g., "A new wave of startups is tackling AI's memory problem."
Newsworthy angle, broader trend significance, funding rounds, notable partnerships. They don't cover tools for the sake of covering tools — there needs to be a story.
This is traditional tech press. Pitch a story angle, not just "we launched a tool." Angle: "The AI memory problem is becoming critical as enterprises adopt AI assistants."
Anytime — journalists work on their own timelines. But avoid pitching on embargo days for major tech events (WWDC, Google I/O, etc.).
URL: https://www.technologyreview.com/newsletter/ Subscribers: ~200,000+ (MIT Tech Review's email list) Who runs it: MIT Technology Review editorial team Frequency: Daily Publishes: Weekday mornings How to submit: PR/press pitch to the editorial team Contact: press@technologyreview.com | Various editors on Twitter Free or paid: Free editorial (it's journalism) Feature format: News coverage — if featured, it's a proper article or mention in The Download newsletter. A typical issue has 2-3 main stories (multi-paragraph) plus 5-6 quick links. Stories are journalist-written with analysis. How tools are featured: Woven into journalistic stories — not a tool directory. You'd be covered as news, e.g., "A new wave of startups is tackling AI's memory problem." What makes them pick a tool: Newsworthy angle, broader trend significance, funding rounds, notable partnerships. They don't cover tools for the sake of covering tools — there needs to be a story. How often they feature new products: Rarely as standalone — products appear within broader tech stories. Best way to pitch: This is traditional tech press. Pitch a story angle, not just "we launched a tool." Angle: "The AI memory problem is becoming critical as enterprises adopt AI assistants." When to pitch: Anytime — journalists work on their own timelines. But avoid pitching on embargo days for major tech events (WWDC, Google I/O, etc.). Priority: MEDIUM (prestige, hard to get, but massive credibility)
Email Alex or reach out via LinkedIn
Mentioned within system design analysis — not a standalone tool section. If Alex writes about "Designing an AI Memory System," Enovari could be mentioned as a real-world example.
Pitch Enovari from a system design perspective — "How to Design a Persistent Memory System for AI." Alex loves system design content. Offer to co-write or provide technical details for a deep dive.
URL: https://blog.bytebytego.com Subscribers: ~500,000+ (Alex Xu has a massive following from his System Design Interview books) Who runs it: Alex Xu (author of System Design Interview books) Frequency: Weekly (Tuesday or Wednesday) Publishes: Mid-week How to submit: Email Alex or reach out via LinkedIn Contact: alex@bytebytego.com | Twitter: @alexxubyte Free or paid: Free editorial mentions within system design content Feature format: System design deep dives, infographics, tool mentions. A typical issue has one main deep-dive (with Alex's signature infographic/diagrams), plus 2-3 shorter items. Tool mentions appear when relevant to the system design topic. How tools are featured: Mentioned within system design analysis — not a standalone tool section. If Alex writes about "Designing an AI Memory System," Enovari could be mentioned as a real-world example. What makes them pick a tool: System design relevance, architectural novelty. Alex cares about how things are built, not just what they do. How often they feature new products: Irregularly — 1-2 product mentions per month within broader content. Best way to pitch: Pitch Enovari from a system design perspective — "How to Design a Persistent Memory System for AI." Alex loves system design content. Offer to co-write or provide technical details for a deep dive. When to pitch: Anytime — his content calendar is planned weeks ahead. Priority: MEDIUM (system design angle, massive audience)
Email or Twitter DM
URL: https://smarterai.beehiiv.com
[VERIFY]
Subscribers: ~100,000+
Who runs it: Igor Pogany
Frequency: Multiple times per week
How to submit: Email or Twitter DM
Contact: Via website | Twitter [VERIFY]
Free or paid: Free editorial + paid sponsorships
Feature format: AI tool recommendations with practical use cases. Focuses on actionable tips for using AI tools effectively.
How tools are featured: Short blurbs with screenshots and practical use-case walkthroughs. More "how to use" than "what it is."
What makes them pick a tool: Practical utility, clear use cases, visual appeal. They like tools that can be demonstrated in a screenshot.
How often they feature new products: 2-3 per issue.
Best way to pitch: Show a practical use case with screenshots. "Here's how Enovari changes an AI workflow in 3 steps."
When to pitch: Rolling basis.
Priority: MEDIUM-HIGHVia website submission form
URL: https://aipediahub.com
[VERIFY]
Subscribers: ~100,000+
Who runs it: Community editorial team
Frequency: Regular
How to submit: Via website submission form
Contact: Via website
Free or paid: Free directory + newsletter
Feature format: AI tool directory and newsletter featuring trending tools.
How tools are featured: Directory listing + newsletter mentions for trending tools.
What makes them pick a tool: Directory submission completeness, community engagement.
How often they feature new products: Continuous directory, weekly newsletter highlights.
Best way to pitch: Submit to directory first, then follow up for newsletter feature.
When to pitch: Anytime.
Priority: MEDIUMTier 3: Focused Newsletters (25K-100K subscribers)
22 itemsEmail or website submission
Short blurb in the tools section. The prompt-engineering angle means tools are often featured in the context of "use this tool + this prompt to achieve X."
Frame Enovari as a tool that makes prompting more effective by giving AI context/memory. "Stop re-explaining everything to your AI" angle.
URL: https://thepromptdaily.com Subscribers: ~100,000+ Who runs it: Team of AI content creators Frequency: Daily Publishes: Morning How to submit: Email or website submission Contact: Via website contact form Free or paid: Free features + paid sponsorships Feature format: Daily AI tips, tools, and prompt engineering content. A typical issue has a "prompt of the day," an AI tip/tutorial, and a tools section. How tools are featured: Short blurb in the tools section. The prompt-engineering angle means tools are often featured in the context of "use this tool + this prompt to achieve X." What makes them pick a tool: Relevance to prompt engineering and AI usage workflows. Tools that enhance or simplify AI interactions are ideal. How often they feature new products: 2-3 per issue. Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari as a tool that makes prompting more effective by giving AI context/memory. "Stop re-explaining everything to your AI" angle. When to pitch: Monday-Tuesday for same-week inclusion. Priority: MEDIUM
Email or Twitter DM
Tools are featured in the context of solopreneur workflows — "here's how to use X to save 5 hours/week on Y." More tutorial than directory.
Frame Enovari as a productivity multiplier for solopreneurs who use AI daily. "Make your AI assistant actually remember your business context."
URL: https://aisolopreneur.beehiiv.com Subscribers: ~80,000+ Who runs it: Aakash Gupta and team
[VERIFY — may be a different creator]
Frequency: Multiple times per week
Publishes: Varies
How to submit: Email or Twitter DM
Contact: Via website | Twitter
Free or paid: Free features + paid sponsorships
Feature format: Actionable AI tool recommendations and tutorials for solopreneurs. Each issue typically includes a main tutorial/workflow, followed by tool recommendations.
How tools are featured: Tools are featured in the context of solopreneur workflows — "here's how to use X to save 5 hours/week on Y." More tutorial than directory.
What makes them pick a tool: Time-saving for solo operators, affordability, ease of use, practical demo.
How often they feature new products: 2-4 per issue.
Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari as a productivity multiplier for solopreneurs who use AI daily. "Make your AI assistant actually remember your business context."
When to pitch: Rolling basis.
Priority: MEDIUMSubmit to their AI tool directory via website + newsletter contact
URL: https://www.aivalley.ai Subscribers: ~100,000+ Who runs it: Community-run newsletter and directory Frequency: Regular newsletter + updated directory How to submit: Submit to their AI tool directory via website + newsletter contact Contact: Via website submission form Free or paid: Free directory listing; paid for premium placement Feature format: Tool directory listings + newsletter features. Similar to TAAFT — a directory with newsletter amplification. How tools are featured: Directory card (name, description, category, link) + newsletter highlight for trending tools. What makes them pick a tool: Submission completeness, category relevance, community traction. How often they feature new products: Continuous directory additions; newsletter highlights weekly. Best way to pitch: Submit to the directory. Similar to TAAFT, getting listed drives organic traffic. When to pitch: Submit to directory anytime. Priority: MEDIUM-HIGH
[VERIFY]Email or Twitter DM
Technical pitch. Shubham covers the developer/builder side of AI. MCP integration, memory architecture — lead with the tech.
URL: https://unwindai.substack.com Subscribers: ~50,000+ Who runs it: Shubham Saboo Frequency: Weekly Publishes: Typically Sunday or Monday
[VERIFY]
How to submit: Email or Twitter DM
Contact: Twitter: @Saboo_Shubham_ | Via Substack
Free or paid: Free editorial
Feature format: Curated AI tools, research, and tutorials with detailed descriptions. A typical issue has 8-12 curated items organized into sections: tools, research papers, tutorials, and notable threads. Each item gets a title, 2-3 sentence description, and a link.
How tools are featured: More detailed than most — 2-3 sentences with context about why the tool matters. Shubham adds personal commentary.
What makes them pick a tool: Technical innovation, developer utility, open-source components, ties to research trends.
How often they feature new products: 3-5 tools per weekly issue.
Examples of tools featured: Open-source AI tools, LangChain, vector databases, AI developer tools
Best way to pitch: Technical pitch. Shubham covers the developer/builder side of AI. MCP integration, memory architecture — lead with the tech.
When to pitch: Mid-week for inclusion in the weekend issue.
Priority: MEDIUM-HIGH (very aligned technically)Email or social media
Newsworthiness. They cover the week's most notable AI events. A tool launch needs to be significant enough to be "news."
URL: https://lastweekin.ai Subscribers: ~60,000+ Who runs it: Andrey Kurenkov and team Frequency: Weekly Publishes: Monday (covering the prior week) How to submit: Email or social media Contact: Via website | Twitter Free or paid: Free editorial Feature format: Weekly roundup of AI news, tools, and research with analysis. A typical issue has a main "opinion" piece, followed by a curated list of 15-20 news items with brief summaries organized by category (industry, research, policy, tools). How tools are featured: Brief mention in the curated list — title + 1-2 sentence summary + link. They don't do standalone tool features. What makes them pick a tool: Newsworthiness. They cover the week's most notable AI events. A tool launch needs to be significant enough to be "news." How often they feature new products: 2-3 product mentions per weekly issue, within a much larger list of news items. Best way to pitch: Tie into a broader AI memory/context trend. They prefer newsworthy angles over product pitches. When to pitch: Monday after launch (so the launch is "this week's news"), or early in the week for same-week consideration. Priority: MEDIUM
[VERIFY]Deep technical analysis in "Scope" issues — if featured, expect a multi-paragraph technical breakdown. "Edge" issues include curated links with brief descriptions.
Technical novelty, architectural innovation, research implications. This audience is ML engineers and AI researchers who want to understand how things work.
URL: https://thesequence.substack.com Subscribers: ~50,000+ Who runs it: Jesus Rodriguez Frequency: Multiple times per week (typically 3x/week) Publishes: Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday
[VERIFY]
How to submit: Email
Contact: Via Substack | Twitter: @TheSequenceAI [VERIFY]
Free or paid: Free editorial (has a paid tier for deeper content)
Feature format: In-depth technical analysis of AI systems, tools, and research. Issues alternate between "Edge" (curated links), "Scope" (deep dives), and "Chat" (interviews). The deep-dive issues are 1,500-3,000 words analyzing a single AI topic.
How tools are featured: Deep technical analysis in "Scope" issues — if featured, expect a multi-paragraph technical breakdown. "Edge" issues include curated links with brief descriptions.
What makes them pick a tool: Technical novelty, architectural innovation, research implications. This audience is ML engineers and AI researchers who want to understand how things work.
How often they feature new products: 2-3 tools per "Edge" issue; 1 deep dive per "Scope" issue.
Best way to pitch: Deep technical pitch about Enovari's memory architecture. This audience is ML engineers and AI researchers.
When to pitch: Anytime — Jesus plans content ahead.
Priority: MEDIUM (very technical audience)Email or social outreach
Short blurb (1-2 sentences) with a link. Tools are presented as "use this with today's prompt" or "this tool makes X easier."
URL: https://promptsdaily.beehiiv.com Subscribers: ~100,000+ Who runs it: Team-run Frequency: Daily Publishes: Morning How to submit: Email or social outreach Contact: Via website Free or paid: Free + paid sponsorships Feature format: Daily AI prompts, tips, and tool recommendations. Each issue has a featured prompt, a tip, and 2-3 tool mentions. How tools are featured: Short blurb (1-2 sentences) with a link. Tools are presented as "use this with today's prompt" or "this tool makes X easier." What makes them pick a tool: Relevance to prompt workflows, accessibility, novelty. How often they feature new products: 2-3 per issue. Best way to pitch: "Stop losing context every conversation" angle. Show how Enovari makes prompt engineering more effective. When to pitch: Rolling basis. Priority: MEDIUM
Email Michael directly
Woven into analysis pieces — not standalone features. Michael might write about "the AI memory problem" and mention Enovari as an example.
URL: https://aisupremacy.substack.com Subscribers: ~40,000+ Who runs it: Michael Spencer Frequency: Multiple times per week How to submit: Email Michael directly Contact: Via Substack | Twitter: @MichaelSpencer
[VERIFY handle]
Free or paid: Free editorial
Feature format: Analysis pieces on AI trends, tools, and industry developments. Michael writes opinion-heavy pieces about AI industry dynamics, business models, and tool ecosystems. Tool mentions appear within these analyses.
How tools are featured: Woven into analysis pieces — not standalone features. Michael might write about "the AI memory problem" and mention Enovari as an example.
What makes them pick a tool: Fits into a narrative about AI industry trends.
How often they feature new products: Irregularly — tools appear when relevant to his analysis.
Best way to pitch: Pitch a guest post or feature about "the AI memory problem" and how Enovari solves it.
When to pitch: Anytime.
Priority: MEDIUMIf Enovari publishes a technical paper on its memory architecture, submit to Davis
Not a tool newsletter — only features tools if they have an associated technical paper or blog post that reads like a paper.
URL: https://dblalock.substack.com Subscribers: ~40,000+ Who runs it: Davis Blalock Frequency: Weekly How to submit: If Enovari publishes a technical paper on its memory architecture, submit to Davis Contact: Via Substack Free or paid: Free Feature format: Paper summaries and analysis — Davis reads and summarizes notable AI/ML papers. Each issue covers 3-5 papers with multi-paragraph summaries. How tools are featured: Not a tool newsletter — only features tools if they have an associated technical paper or blog post that reads like a paper. What makes them pick a tool: Requires a genuine technical paper. Marketing content won't work. How often they feature new products: Rarely — this is a paper-focused newsletter. Best way to pitch: Requires a technical paper or blog post about the memory system architecture. Long-term play. When to pitch: After publishing a technical paper/deep technical blog post. Priority: LOW (requires technical paper)
[VERIFY]Email Sebastian
In-depth technical review within a topic-focused issue. If Sebastian writes about memory systems, Enovari could be extensively analyzed.
Technical significance and educational value. Sebastian is an ML educator first — he covers things that help his audience learn.
URL: https://magazine.sebastianraschka.com Subscribers: ~50,000+ Who runs it: Sebastian Raschka (Lightning AI, author of "Machine Learning with PyTorch and Scikit-Learn" and other ML books) Frequency: Monthly/bi-weekly Publishes: Irregular schedule
[VERIFY]
How to submit: Email Sebastian
Contact: Via Substack | Twitter: @rasaborat [VERIFY handle — likely @rasbt]
Free or paid: Free
Feature format: Deep technical analysis and tool reviews. Each issue is a long-form deep dive (3,000-5,000+ words) on a specific AI/ML topic, with code examples, comparisons, and practical guidance.
How tools are featured: In-depth technical review within a topic-focused issue. If Sebastian writes about memory systems, Enovari could be extensively analyzed.
What makes them pick a tool: Technical significance and educational value. Sebastian is an ML educator first — he covers things that help his audience learn.
How often they feature new products: 1-2 per monthly issue, deeply integrated into the analysis.
Best way to pitch: Highly technical pitch about the memory architecture. Sebastian is a respected ML educator.
When to pitch: Anytime — monthly cadence means longer lead time.
Priority: MEDIUM (prestige, very technical)Get your content on the front page of Hacker News first. The newsletter curates top HN stories from the week. You can also email Kale directly.
Get traction on Hacker News first (post a Show HN), then email Kale if your post did well. Alternative: email directly with a compelling developer-focused pitch.
The real play here is doing a "Show HN: Enovari - Persistent Memory for AI Assistants" post and getting it to trend. If it does well, it'll automatically get picked up by Hacker Newsletter and many other curators.
URL: https://hackernewsletter.com Subscribers: ~60,000+ Who runs it: Kale Davis Frequency: Weekly (every Friday) Publishes: Friday How to submit: Get your content on the front page of Hacker News first. The newsletter curates top HN stories from the week. You can also email Kale directly. Contact: kale@hackernewsletter.com | Twitter: @hackernewsletter Free or paid: Free editorial Feature format: Curated links from Hacker News with brief editorial commentary, organized by category (programming, design, startup, AI, etc.). Typically 10-15 links per issue. How tools are featured: A link with Kale's brief comment (1 sentence). The real value is the HN audience curation — readers trust his picks. What makes them pick a tool: Performance on Hacker News. If your "Show HN" post gets 100+ upvotes, it's likely to be included. How often they feature new products: 2-5 per issue, depending on HN trends. Examples of tools featured: Whatever trends on HN — developer tools, open-source projects, startup launches, technical blog posts Best way to pitch: Get traction on Hacker News first (post a Show HN), then email Kale if your post did well. Alternative: email directly with a compelling developer-focused pitch. When to pitch: Tuesday-Wednesday for a good HN run before Friday's newsletter. Priority: MEDIUM (requires HN traction, but the audience is perfect) Notes: The real play here is doing a "Show HN: Enovari - Persistent Memory for AI Assistants" post and getting it to trend. If it does well, it'll automatically get picked up by Hacker Newsletter and many other curators.
[VERIFY]Publish a technical article or announcement on Dev.to. Trending posts get included in the digest.
Through articles you write — it's content marketing, not a tool listing. A well-written technical article about Enovari that resonates with developers can reach the digest.
Community engagement. Articles that get reactions, comments, and bookmarks trend. Write genuinely useful content, not marketing fluff.
Write a genuinely useful article like "How I Built Persistent Memory for AI Assistants" or "MCP Integration Guide: Giving Your AI a Long-Term Memory." Make it technical, useful, and not too salesy.
Dev.to is more of a content marketing play than a newsletter pitch. Write 2-3 articles about Enovari with technical depth. If they trend, they'll appear in the digest automatically.
URL: https://dev.to (newsletter settings in account preferences) Subscribers: ~500,000+ registered users, newsletter reach varies Who runs it: Dev.to / Forem community Frequency: Weekly digest + daily trending Publishes: Weekly digest on Sunday/Monday
[VERIFY]
How to submit: Publish a technical article or announcement on Dev.to. Trending posts get included in the digest.
Contact: Not a pitch — publish content directly. For partnerships: yo@dev.to
Free or paid: Free — it's a community platform
Feature format: Your article appears in the digest if it trends. The digest features the top 7-10 articles of the week. Articles with high engagement (reactions, comments, bookmarks) get featured.
How tools are featured: Through articles you write — it's content marketing, not a tool listing. A well-written technical article about Enovari that resonates with developers can reach the digest.
What makes them pick a tool: Community engagement. Articles that get reactions, comments, and bookmarks trend. Write genuinely useful content, not marketing fluff.
How often they feature new products: Every issue features 7-10 trending articles, some of which are about tools/products.
Examples of tools featured: Developer tools, open-source libraries, frameworks, tutorials about new tech
Best way to pitch: Write a genuinely useful article like "How I Built Persistent Memory for AI Assistants" or "MCP Integration Guide: Giving Your AI a Long-Term Memory." Make it technical, useful, and not too salesy.
When to pitch: Publish articles Tuesday-Wednesday for best chance of trending by the weekend digest.
Priority: MEDIUM-HIGH (great for developer audience + SEO)
Notes: Dev.to is more of a content marketing play than a newsletter pitch. Write 2-3 articles about Enovari with technical depth. If they trend, they'll appear in the digest automatically.Email swyx or apply to be a podcast guest
Newsletter: paragraph-length description with technical analysis. Podcast: full-length interview (the gold standard of coverage — a dedicated 60-90 min conversation about your product and vision).
Technical depth, developer infrastructure relevance, novel architecture, interesting founding story. Swyx and Alessio are deeply technical and well-connected in the AI infra community.
Pitch a podcast episode about "The AI Memory Problem" — swyx loves technical deep dives. Also pitch for the newsletter's tools section.
Latent Space is one of the most influential technical AI podcasts. Getting featured here is a major credibility signal in the developer community. A podcast appearance alone can drive significant sign-ups from exactly the right audience.
URL: https://www.latent.space Subscribers: ~40,000+ (newsletter) + large podcast audience (top AI podcast) Who runs it: Swyx (Shawn Wang) & Alessio Fanelli Frequency: Weekly newsletter + regular podcast episodes (1-2 per week) Publishes: Newsletter mid-week; podcast episodes vary How to submit: Email swyx or apply to be a podcast guest Contact: Twitter: @swyx, @alessiofanelli | Via website Free or paid: Free editorial Feature format: In-depth technical coverage. Podcast interviews are 60-90 min deep dives. Newsletter features technical tools and launches with substantial commentary (paragraph-length descriptions). The newsletter typically covers 5-8 items with Swyx's personal analysis. How tools are featured: Newsletter: paragraph-length description with technical analysis. Podcast: full-length interview (the gold standard of coverage — a dedicated 60-90 min conversation about your product and vision). What makes them pick a tool: Technical depth, developer infrastructure relevance, novel architecture, interesting founding story. Swyx and Alessio are deeply technical and well-connected in the AI infra community. How often they feature new products: Newsletter: 3-5 per issue. Podcast: 1 guest per episode, 1-2 episodes per week. Examples of tools featured: LangChain, Pinecone, Chroma, Weaviate, Vercel AI SDK, Anthropic tools Best way to pitch: Pitch a podcast episode about "The AI Memory Problem" — swyx loves technical deep dives. Also pitch for the newsletter's tools section. When to pitch: Podcast bookings are scheduled weeks ahead. Newsletter pitches: Monday-Tuesday for same-week. Priority: HIGH (perfect audience for Enovari's MCP developer angle) Notes: Latent Space is one of the most influential technical AI podcasts. Getting featured here is a major credibility signal in the developer community. A podcast appearance alone can drive significant sign-ups from exactly the right audience.
Submit via https://futuretools.io/submit-a-tool or email
Directory: standard listing card. Newsletter: curated "tools of the week" with brief descriptions. YouTube: visual demo with Matt's commentary (this is the real prize — a YouTube feature can get 100K-500K+ views).
Visual appeal, "wow factor" demos, broad accessibility. Matt's audience is more general/creator than developer. Tools that look impressive in a screen recording do well.
Submit to the directory AND email Matt with a compelling demo video/GIF. If he features you in a YouTube video, that's 100K+ views.
Matt's YouTube channel is arguably more valuable than the newsletter. A video feature can drive massive traffic. Send him a clear, compelling demo.
URL: https://futuretools.io Subscribers: ~50,000+ (newsletter) + large YouTube audience (700K+ subscribers) Who runs it: Matt Wolfe Frequency: Weekly newsletter + regular YouTube videos (2-3 per week) Publishes: Newsletter typically Friday; YouTube videos throughout the week How to submit: Submit via https://futuretools.io/submit-a-tool or email Contact: matt@futuretools.io | Twitter: @maborat
[VERIFY handle — likely @maborat or @matt_wolfe] | YouTube: Matt Wolfe
Free or paid: Free to submit; he may feature tools in both newsletter and YouTube videos
Feature format: Tool directory listing + potential YouTube video feature (massive exposure) + newsletter mention. The directory listing includes name, description, category, pricing, and a link. YouTube features are 5-15 min segments within larger "AI tools roundup" videos.
How tools are featured: Directory: standard listing card. Newsletter: curated "tools of the week" with brief descriptions. YouTube: visual demo with Matt's commentary (this is the real prize — a YouTube feature can get 100K-500K+ views).
What makes them pick a tool: Visual appeal, "wow factor" demos, broad accessibility. Matt's audience is more general/creator than developer. Tools that look impressive in a screen recording do well.
How often they feature new products: Directory: continuous. Newsletter: 5-10 tools per issue. YouTube: 5-15 tools per roundup video.
Examples of tools featured: Hundreds of AI tools across all categories
Best way to pitch: Submit to the directory AND email Matt with a compelling demo video/GIF. If he features you in a YouTube video, that's 100K+ views.
When to pitch: Wednesday-Thursday for newsletter consideration (Friday publish). For YouTube, pitch anytime — he plans videos ahead.
Priority: HIGH (YouTube + newsletter combo is extremely powerful)
Notes: Matt's YouTube channel is arguably more valuable than the newsletter. A video feature can drive massive traffic. Send him a clear, compelling demo.Submit via https://console.dev/submit or email
Mini-review format (3-5 sentences) — more detailed than most newsletters. David and team actually try the tools before featuring them. This means getting featured carries credibility.
Developer utility, novel approach, interesting architecture, good developer experience. They specifically seek developer tools — not consumer AI apps.
Console.dev is one of the best newsletters specifically for developer tool discovery. This is a perfect fit for Enovari.
URL: https://console.dev Subscribers: ~25,000+ Who runs it: David Mytton (co-founder of Server Density) Frequency: Weekly (Thursday) Publishes: Thursday How to submit: Submit via https://console.dev/submit or email Contact: hello@console.dev | Twitter: @consoledotdev Free or paid: Free — they specifically feature interesting developer tools Feature format: Short reviews of developer tools with ratings and analysis. They do a "Tools of the Week" section featuring 2-3 tools with multi-paragraph mini-reviews: what it does, what's interesting, who it's for, and a direct link. How tools are featured: Mini-review format (3-5 sentences) — more detailed than most newsletters. David and team actually try the tools before featuring them. This means getting featured carries credibility. What makes them pick a tool: Developer utility, novel approach, interesting architecture, good developer experience. They specifically seek developer tools — not consumer AI apps. How often they feature new products: 2-3 per weekly issue, all given mini-reviews. Examples of tools featured: Warp terminal, Fig, Railway, PlanetScale, Supabase Best way to pitch: Submit via their form. They specifically seek developer tools. Emphasize MCP integration and developer experience. When to pitch: Monday-Tuesday for Thursday's issue. Priority: HIGH (specifically a dev tools discovery newsletter) Notes: Console.dev is one of the best newsletters specifically for developer tool discovery. This is a perfect fit for Enovari.
You don't "submit" — Ben covers what he finds strategically interesting. Getting on his radar through other press coverage can lead to a mention.
Mentioned within strategic analysis — never a standalone tool feature. Ben might write about the "AI memory layer" as a strategic concept and mention Enovari.
Strategic significance to the tech industry. Ben writes about platform dynamics, aggregation theory, and industry structure. You need to be part of a bigger story.
Long shot — but if Enovari becomes a significant example of a broader trend (e.g., "the unbundling of AI memory from AI models"), Ben might cover it organically. Getting covered by other press first helps.
URL: https://stratechery.com Subscribers: ~100,000+ (one of the most influential tech strategy newsletters) Who runs it: Ben Thompson Frequency: Daily articles (3 free per week, rest behind paywall) Publishes: Daily How to submit: You don't "submit" — Ben covers what he finds strategically interesting. Getting on his radar through other press coverage can lead to a mention. Contact: Via the site | Twitter: @benthompson Free or paid: Paywalled analysis; no paid placements Feature format: Long-form strategic analysis (2,000-5,000 words). Tool mentions are rare and appear within broader industry analysis. How tools are featured: Mentioned within strategic analysis — never a standalone tool feature. Ben might write about the "AI memory layer" as a strategic concept and mention Enovari. What makes them pick a tool: Strategic significance to the tech industry. Ben writes about platform dynamics, aggregation theory, and industry structure. You need to be part of a bigger story. How often they feature new products: Very rarely as standalone. Best way to pitch: Long shot — but if Enovari becomes a significant example of a broader trend (e.g., "the unbundling of AI memory from AI models"), Ben might cover it organically. Getting covered by other press first helps. Priority: LOW (aspirational — extreme prestige, but very hard to get featured)
Email Gergely or reach out on Twitter. He occasionally covers tools relevant to engineering teams.
Relevance to engineering teams, novel approach, genuine utility that Gergely has personally experienced or heard about from trusted sources.
Frame Enovari as relevant to engineering team productivity or AI-assisted development workflows. Offer Gergely early access.
URL: https://newsletter.pragmaticengineer.com Subscribers: ~600,000+ (one of the largest engineering newsletters) Who runs it: Gergely Orosz (former Uber engineering manager) Frequency: Weekly (paid) + free posts Publishes: Tuesday How to submit: Email Gergely or reach out on Twitter. He occasionally covers tools relevant to engineering teams. Contact: Via Substack | Twitter: @GergelyOrosz Free or paid: Free tier + paid tier; no paid tool placements Feature format: Long-form essays about engineering culture, hiring, tools, and industry trends. 3,000-5,000 words per issue. How tools are featured: Organic mentions within essays — not a tool directory. Similar to Lenny's Newsletter but for engineering. What makes them pick a tool: Relevance to engineering teams, novel approach, genuine utility that Gergely has personally experienced or heard about from trusted sources. How often they feature new products: Irregularly. Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari as relevant to engineering team productivity or AI-assisted development workflows. Offer Gergely early access. Priority: MEDIUM-LOW (not primarily AI-focused, but massive reach among engineers)
Email or social media outreach
URL: https://aiforhumans.io
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Subscribers: ~50,000+
Who runs it: Gavin Purcell and Kevin Pereira
Frequency: Weekly
How to submit: Email or social media outreach
Contact: Via website
Free or paid: Free editorial
Feature format: Accessible AI news and tools for a general audience. Less technical than Latent Space, more approachable.
How tools are featured: Brief mentions with plain-language descriptions. They translate technical tools for a mainstream audience.
What makes them pick a tool: Mass appeal, ease of explanation, "cool factor."
How often they feature new products: 2-3 per issue.
Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari in simple terms: "Your AI finally remembers who you are." Avoid technical jargon.
Priority: MEDIUMURL: https://overfitted.beehiiv.com
[VERIFY]
Subscribers: ~30,000+
Who runs it: ML/AI community contributors
Frequency: Weekly
How to submit: Email
Contact: Via website
Free or paid: Free editorial
Feature format: ML/AI research and tools with technical commentary.
How tools are featured: Technical blurbs within curated lists.
What makes them pick a tool: Technical novelty, ML/AI relevance.
How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue.
Best way to pitch: Lead with the technical architecture. This is an ML audience.
Priority: MEDIUMEmail or website form
URL: https://mindstream.news
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Subscribers: ~200,000+
Who runs it: Editorial team
Frequency: Daily
Publishes: Morning
How to submit: Email or website form
Contact: Via website
Free or paid: Free editorial + paid sponsorships
Feature format: AI news digest with tool recommendations. Similar format to The Rundown — short blurbs in curated sections.
How tools are featured: Brief text blurb with hyperlinked name. 1-2 sentences.
What makes them pick a tool: Novelty, practical utility, ties to trending topics.
How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue.
Best way to pitch: Short, punchy email pitch. Highlight the unique angle.
When to pitch: Monday-Tuesday for same-week.
Priority: MEDIUM-HIGHIncluded as a placeholder — the newsletter space is fragmented and new entrants appear monthly. Search for recently launched AI newsletters on Beehiiv, Substack, and ConvertKit directories.
URL: Various —
[VERIFY] the AI newsletter space has many names that overlap. Search for "The AI Report newsletter" to find current options.
Subscribers: Varies
Notes: Included as a placeholder — the newsletter space is fragmented and new entrants appear monthly. Search for recently launched AI newsletters on Beehiiv, Substack, and ConvertKit directories.Via website
URL: https://notabot.tech
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Subscribers: ~30,000+
Who runs it: Community-driven
Frequency: Weekly
How to submit: Via website
Contact: Via website
Free or paid: Free editorial
Feature format: AI tool roundups with brief reviews.
How tools are featured: Short review blurbs with screenshots.
What makes them pick a tool: Visual appeal, practical utility.
How often they feature new products: 5-8 per issue.
Priority: MEDIUMTier 4: Niche & Developer Newsletters (5K-25K subscribers)
23 itemsEmail or Twitter
URL: https://aitidbits.substack.com Subscribers: ~20,000+ Who runs it: Sahar Mor Frequency: Weekly How to submit: Email or Twitter Contact: Via Substack | Twitter Free or paid: Free Feature format: Curated AI tools and news with brief descriptions. Typically 8-12 items per issue. How tools are featured: Brief blurb (1-2 sentences) with a link. What makes them pick a tool: Novelty, developer relevance. How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue. Priority: MEDIUM
Email submission
URL: https://theaipulse.beehiiv.com Subscribers: ~25,000+ Who runs it: Community team Frequency: Weekly How to submit: Email submission Contact: Via website Free or paid: Free editorial Feature format: AI tool roundups and news. How tools are featured: Short blurbs in curated list format. What makes them pick a tool: Novelty, practical utility. How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue. Priority: MEDIUM-LOW
Email or website form
URL: https://aibrews.beehiiv.com Subscribers: ~30,000+ Who runs it: Community-driven Frequency: Multiple times per week How to submit: Email or website form Contact: Via website Free or paid: Free features available Feature format: Curated AI news and tool features. How tools are featured: Short blurbs with links. What makes them pick a tool: Novelty, accessibility. How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue. Priority: MEDIUM
Content is auto-curated from AI Twitter/social + manual additions
URL: https://buttondown.email/ainews Subscribers: ~15,000+ Who runs it: Swyx (Shawn Wang — yes, he runs multiple newsletters) Frequency: Daily automated + weekly curated How to submit: Content is auto-curated from AI Twitter/social + manual additions Contact: Twitter: @swyx Free or paid: Free Feature format: Automated curation of top AI discussions from Twitter/social media. Each issue aggregates the most-discussed AI topics of the day. How tools are featured: If your tool is being discussed on AI Twitter, it gets auto-included. Not a traditional pitch target. What makes them pick a tool: Twitter/social buzz. It's automated curation. How often they feature new products: Daily — whatever is trending. Best way to pitch: Get Enovari trending on AI Twitter. The newsletter auto-picks up popular AI discussions. Priority: MEDIUM
Submit via changelog.com/submit or email
Brief blurb with link in curated list. The podcast network is also valuable — getting on The Changelog podcast would be significant exposure.
URL: https://changelog.com/weekly Subscribers: ~25,000+ (newsletter) + large podcast network (The Changelog, Go Time, JS Party, etc.) Who runs it: Adam Stacoviak, Jerod Santo Frequency: Weekly (Sunday) Publishes: Sunday How to submit: Submit via changelog.com/submit or email Contact: editors@changelog.com | Twitter: @changelog Free or paid: Free editorial Feature format: Curated developer news, tools, and open-source projects. Typically 15-20 links organized by category, each with a 1-2 sentence description. How tools are featured: Brief blurb with link in curated list. The podcast network is also valuable — getting on The Changelog podcast would be significant exposure. What makes them pick a tool: Open-source components, developer utility, interesting technical approach. How often they feature new products: 5-8 tools per weekly issue. Best way to pitch: Developer-focused pitch. Emphasize open-source components, MCP integration, developer experience. When to pitch: Wednesday-Thursday for Sunday's newsletter. Priority: MEDIUM
Submit content via their website
URL: https://www.pointer.io Subscribers: ~25,000+ Who runs it: Pointer team Frequency: Weekly How to submit: Submit content via their website Contact: Via website Free or paid: Free Feature format: Curated reading list for developers — articles, tools, launches. Typically 10 items per issue with brief descriptions. How tools are featured: Link + brief description in curated list. What makes them pick a tool: Developer relevance, quality of associated technical content (blog posts, docs). How often they feature new products: 2-3 per issue. Priority: MEDIUM-LOW
[VERIFY]Email Oren
URL: https://softwareleadweekly.com Subscribers: ~30,000+ Who runs it: Oren Ellenbogen (VP Engineering at various companies) Frequency: Weekly Publishes: Tuesday
[VERIFY]
How to submit: Email Oren
Contact: oren@softwareleadweekly.com | Twitter: @orenellenbogen [VERIFY handle]
Free or paid: Free
Feature format: Curated links for engineering leaders — articles about management, culture, and tools.
How tools are featured: Mentioned within leadership/management context. Not a tool-focused newsletter.
What makes them pick a tool: Relevance to engineering leadership and team productivity.
How often they feature new products: Rarely as standalone.
Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari from an engineering leadership perspective — team productivity, AI-assisted development workflows.
Priority: LOW-MEDIUMEmail or website submission
URL: https://aidigest.net Subscribers: ~30,000+ Who runs it: Community-run Frequency: Weekly How to submit: Email or website submission Contact: Via website Free or paid: Free Feature format: Curated AI news and tool features. How tools are featured: Short blurbs in curated lists. What makes them pick a tool: Novelty, AI relevance. How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue. Priority: MEDIUM
Get traction on Hacker News
URL: https://hndigest.com Subscribers: ~20,000+ Who runs it: Automated curation + editorial Frequency: Daily or weekly digest options How to submit: Get traction on Hacker News Contact: N/A — automated based on HN ranking Free or paid: Free Feature format: Top HN stories compiled into a digest email. How tools are featured: Automated inclusion based on HN ranking. What makes them pick a tool: HN upvotes — it's algorithmic. How often they feature new products: Every issue features whatever trended on HN. Best way to pitch: Post on HN and get upvotes. A "Show HN" post about Enovari that performs well will automatically be included. Priority: MEDIUM (requires HN strategy)
Email Kai
URL: https://www.densediscovery.com Subscribers: ~38,000+ Who runs it: Kai Brach Frequency: Weekly (Tuesday) Publishes: Tuesday How to submit: Email Kai Contact: kai@densediscovery.com | Twitter Free or paid: Free editorial; paid sponsorships available Feature format: Curated links in a beautifully designed newsletter covering tech, design, and culture. Typically 10-15 links plus a sponsored section and a "worth your time" section. How tools are featured: Brief description in curated list. Kai's newsletter is known for its curation quality and design aesthetic. What makes them pick a tool: Thoughtful design, positive social impact, craft. Kai appreciates tools made with care. How often they feature new products: 2-3 per issue. Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari as a thoughtfully designed developer tool. Kai appreciates craft and design. When to pitch: Thursday-Friday for Tuesday's newsletter. Priority: LOW-MEDIUM (design-focused audience, not primarily AI)
Email or via their content submission process
URL: https://www.smashingmagazine.com/the-smashing-newsletter/ Subscribers: ~200,000+ Who runs it: Vitaly Friedman Frequency: Weekly/bi-weekly How to submit: Email or via their content submission process Contact: Via website Free or paid: Free editorial Feature format: Developer/designer tools and resources. Front-end and UX focused. How tools are featured: Brief mention in curated list of resources. What makes them pick a tool: Developer/designer relevance, front-end connection. How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue. Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari as a developer productivity tool. Smashing Magazine's audience is web developers and designers. Priority: LOW (tangential audience)
tips@thehustle.co
These are important because they reach builders who use AI tools: a. Indie Hackers Newsletter URL: https://www.indiehackers.com Subscribers: Large community (100K+ members) How to submit: Post in the community, share your tool, write about your journey building Enovari Feature format: Community posts that trend get visibility. "Show IH" posts and milestone posts do well. What makes them pick a tool: Founder story, revenue/traction milestones, relatable building journey. Priority: MEDIUM b. Starter Story URL: https://www.starterstory.com Subscribers: ~100,000+ How to submit: Apply to be featured as a founder story Feature format: Interview-format case study about your startup journey, including revenue numbers. What makes them pick a tool: Willingness to share real numbers and behind-the-scenes details. Priority: LOW-MEDIUM c. The Hustle (HubSpot) URL: https://thehustle.co Subscribers: ~2,000,000+ How to submit: tips@thehustle.co Feature format: Startup stories, business trends. AI tools appear when there's a business angle. What makes them pick a tool: Strong business story, trend significance. Priority: LOW-MEDIUM (very broad audience)
PR pitch to The Verge reporters covering AI (e.g., Kylie Robison, James Vincent)
URL: https://www.theverge.com/pages/newsletters Subscribers: ~500,000+ (The Verge's full newsletter reach) Who runs it: The Verge editorial team Frequency: Daily How to submit: PR pitch to The Verge reporters covering AI (e.g., Kylie Robison, James Vincent) Contact: Via The Verge's tips/contact page Free or paid: Free editorial (journalism) Feature format: News coverage within The Verge's newsletters and articles. How tools are featured: Journalistic coverage — if featured, it's as part of a news story. What makes them pick a tool: Newsworthiness, consumer angle, trend significance. Priority: LOW-MEDIUM (very broad, hard to get, but great credibility)
[VERIFY]PR pitch to AI/tech reporters (e.g., Benj Edwards, Kyle Orland for AI coverage)
URL: https://arstechnica.com/newsletters/ Subscribers: ~200,000+
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Who runs it: Ars Technica editorial team
Frequency: Daily
How to submit: PR pitch to AI/tech reporters (e.g., Benj Edwards, Kyle Orland for AI coverage)
Contact: Via Ars Technica tips/contact page
Free or paid: Free editorial (journalism)
Feature format: In-depth technical journalism. If featured, expect a thorough, technical article.
How tools are featured: Detailed journalistic coverage with technical analysis.
What makes them pick a tool: Technical depth, novel approach, broader significance.
Priority: MEDIUM (technical audience, strong credibility)Email Ben
Mentioned within industry analysis — not standalone features. Ben might analyze the "AI memory tools" market and include Enovari.
URL: https://gradientflow.substack.com
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Subscribers: ~25,000+
Who runs it: Ben Lorica (former O'Reilly chief data scientist)
Frequency: Weekly/bi-weekly
How to submit: Email Ben
Contact: Via Substack | Twitter: @bigdata
Free or paid: Free editorial
Feature format: In-depth analysis of AI/data industry trends, tools, and market dynamics. Each issue is a long-form essay with charts and analysis.
How tools are featured: Mentioned within industry analysis — not standalone features. Ben might analyze the "AI memory tools" market and include Enovari.
What makes them pick a tool: Market significance, enterprise relevance, data infrastructure angle.
How often they feature new products: 1-2 per issue, within broader analysis.
Best way to pitch: Pitch the "AI memory infrastructure" market angle. Ben thinks in market terms.
Priority: MEDIUMNot a typical tool newsletter — they analyze AI hype and reality. Getting featured here means surviving their critical analysis.
URL: https://www.aisnakeoil.com (Substack) Subscribers: ~50,000+ Who runs it: Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kapoor (Princeton) Frequency: Weekly/bi-weekly How to submit: Not a typical tool newsletter — they analyze AI hype and reality. Getting featured here means surviving their critical analysis. Contact: Via Substack Free or paid: Free Feature format: Critical analysis of AI claims and products. If they cover Enovari, it would be in the context of "is AI memory real or hype?" How tools are featured: Analytical/critical coverage — not promotional. What makes them pick a tool: Products that exemplify a broader point about AI capabilities or hype. Priority: LOW (could go either way — if they approve of Enovari's approach, it's a strong signal)
Submit via their website form or email
URL: https://dataelixir.com Subscribers: ~50,000+ Who runs it: Lon Riesberg Frequency: Weekly (Tuesday) Publishes: Tuesday How to submit: Submit via their website form or email Contact: Via website Free or paid: Free editorial + paid sponsorships Feature format: Curated data science and ML links — articles, tools, tutorials, jobs. Typically 15-20 links per issue organized by category. How tools are featured: Brief description with link in curated list. What makes them pick a tool: Data/ML relevance, practical utility for data practitioners. How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue. Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari's memory architecture from a data engineering perspective. When to pitch: Thursday-Friday for Tuesday's issue. Priority: MEDIUM-LOW
Engage with the community (Slack, meetups) or email
URL: https://mlops.community
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Subscribers: ~20,000+
Who runs it: Demetrios Brinkmann and the MLOps community
Frequency: Weekly
How to submit: Engage with the community (Slack, meetups) or email
Contact: Via website/Slack community
Free or paid: Free
Feature format: MLOps tools, best practices, and community content.
How tools are featured: Mentioned in curated lists and community discussions. They also run meetups/webinars where tools can be demoed.
What makes them pick a tool: MLOps relevance, production-readiness, infrastructure angle.
How often they feature new products: 2-3 per issue.
Best way to pitch: Frame Enovari as AI infrastructure — the memory layer in an AI ops stack. Pitch to present at a community meetup.
Priority: MEDIUMEmail or website form
URL: https://www.deeplearningweekly.com Subscribers: ~15,000+ Who runs it: Editorial team Frequency: Weekly How to submit: Email or website form Contact: Via website Free or paid: Free editorial Feature format: Curated deep learning research, tools, and news. How tools are featured: Brief blurb with link in curated list. What makes them pick a tool: DL/ML relevance, technical novelty. How often they feature new products: 3-5 per issue. Priority: LOW-MEDIUM
Getting featured usually requires being in the a16z network or having significant traction. Pitch to the a16z team covering AI.
URL: https://a16z.com/newsletters/
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Subscribers: ~100,000+ (a16z has massive newsletter reach across their various publications)
Who runs it: Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) editorial team
Frequency: Weekly
How to submit: Getting featured usually requires being in the a16z network or having significant traction. Pitch to the a16z team covering AI.
Contact: Via a16z website | Individual partners on Twitter (e.g., @a]Horowitz)
Free or paid: Free editorial
Feature format: AI industry analysis, market maps, and tool ecosystem overviews.
How tools are featured: Mentioned in market analysis or ecosystem maps.
What makes them pick a tool: Venture-scale potential, market significance, portfolio relevance.
Priority: LOW-MEDIUM (hard to get in without VC relationship)URL: https://aitangle.substack.com
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Subscribers: ~10,000+
Who runs it: Independent AI analyst
Frequency: Weekly
How to submit: Email
Contact: Via Substack
Free or paid: Free
Feature format: AI tools and analysis.
How tools are featured: Brief reviews.
Priority: LOWPR pitch to the AI team
URL: https://www.technologyreview.com/newsletter/the-algorithm/ Subscribers: Part of MIT Tech Review's email list (~200,000+ combined) Who runs it: MIT Technology Review AI reporters (Melissa Heikkila and others) Frequency: Weekly (separate from The Download, which is daily) How to submit: PR pitch to the AI team Contact: melissa.heikkila@technologyreview.com
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Free or paid: Free editorial (journalism)
Feature format: In-depth AI analysis and reporting. More focused on AI specifically than The Download.
How tools are featured: Journalistic coverage within AI analysis pieces.
What makes them pick a tool: Broader AI significance, novel approach, policy implications.
Priority: MEDIUM (more AI-focused than The Download)Via website
URL: https://www.turingpost.com
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Subscribers: ~25,000+
Who runs it: Editorial team focused on AI/ML
Frequency: Weekly
How to submit: Via website
Contact: Via website
Free or paid: Free editorial
Feature format: AI industry analysis, tool reviews, and research summaries.
How tools are featured: Analysis-format coverage.
What makes them pick a tool: Technical depth, industry relevance.
Priority: MEDIUMTier 5: Platform Digests & Aggregators
10 itemsOpen-source components of Enovari, or SDK/libraries. Trending repos get massive visibility. A repo needs 50-100+ stars in a day to trend.
If Enovari has open-source components (MCP server, SDKs, etc.), push them to GitHub with a compelling README, clear docs, and encourage starring. Launch the open-source component on the same day as other PR pushes for compound effect.
URL: https://github.com/trending + GitHub's own digest emails How to get featured: Open-source components of Enovari, or SDK/libraries. Trending repos get massive visibility. A repo needs 50-100+ stars in a day to trend. Feature format: Trending repo card with name, description, language, and star count. Best strategy: If Enovari has open-source components (MCP server, SDKs, etc.), push them to GitHub with a compelling README, clear docs, and encourage starring. Launch the open-source component on the same day as other PR pushes for compound effect. Priority: HIGH (if Enovari has open-source components)
Post "Show HN: Enovari - Persistent Memory for AI Assistants" — if it trends, dozens of newsletters pick it up automatically.
Post at 8-9 AM ET on a weekday (Tuesday-Thursday is best). Have a compelling title, be prepared to answer questions in the comments personally, and don't over-market. HN values authenticity and technical depth.
A successful Show HN is the single highest-leverage action for newsletter coverage. Many newsletter curators actively monitor HN for content. One strong HN post can cascade into 5-10 newsletter features within the same week.
URL: https://news.ycombinator.com How to get featured: Post "Show HN: Enovari - Persistent Memory for AI Assistants" — if it trends, dozens of newsletters pick it up automatically. Feature format: HN post with title, URL, and comment thread. Best strategy: Post at 8-9 AM ET on a weekday (Tuesday-Thursday is best). Have a compelling title, be prepared to answer questions in the comments personally, and don't over-market. HN values authenticity and technical depth. Priority: HIGH (force multiplier — one good HN post feeds 10+ newsletters) Notes: A successful Show HN is the single highest-leverage action for newsletter coverage. Many newsletter curators actively monitor HN for content. One strong HN post can cascade into 5-10 newsletter features within the same week.
Write genuinely useful posts (not marketing). Share technical deep dives, comparisons, or novel use cases. r/LocalLLaMA is especially relevant for MCP-related tools.
Trending posts get picked up by various newsletter curators Best strategy: Write genuinely useful posts (not marketing). Share technical deep dives, comparisons, or novel use cases. r/LocalLLaMA is especially relevant for MCP-related tools. Priority: MEDIUM-HIGH
Build relationships with AI Twitter influencers over weeks before pitching. Share useful content, reply thoughtfully to their tweets, RT with commentary. When you launch, tag them and ask for feedback (not promotion).
Not a newsletter per se, but many newsletter curators source from AI Twitter Getting engagement from key accounts (@swyx, @rowancheung, @heyzain, @bentossell) often leads to newsletter features Best strategy: Build relationships with AI Twitter influencers over weeks before pitching. Share useful content, reply thoughtfully to their tweets, RT with commentary. When you launch, tag them and ask for feedback (not promotion). Priority: HIGH (feeds into multiple newsletters)
Submit at https://betalist.com/submit
Submit with a compelling one-liner and clear screenshots. Pay for expedited review if timing matters for your launch week.
URL: https://betalist.com How to submit: Submit at https://betalist.com/submit Subscribers: ~30,000+ newsletter subscribers + website traffic Free or paid: Free to submit; paid for faster review ($129) Feature format: Startup listing with description and link Best strategy: Submit with a compelling one-liner and clear screenshots. Pay for expedited review if timing matters for your launch week. Priority: MEDIUM-HIGH (startup discovery platform, similar to Product Hunt)
Submit via their website
URL: https://uneed.best
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How to submit: Submit via their website
Subscribers: Growing directory + newsletter
Feature format: Tool directory with upvotes
Priority: MEDIUMVia website submission form
URL: https://toolfinder.ai
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How to submit: Via website submission form
Feature format: AI tool directory with categories and reviews
Priority: MEDIUMSubmit via their website
URL: https://www.futurepedia.io How to submit: Submit via their website Subscribers: Large directory traffic + newsletter Feature format: AI tool directory listing similar to TAAFT. Includes name, description, category, pricing. Best strategy: Submit and ensure your listing is complete. Futurepedia has strong SEO for "AI tool" searches. Priority: MEDIUM-HIGH
URL: https://saasweekly.com
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Subscribers: ~15,000+
How to submit: Email
Feature format: Curated SaaS news and tools
Priority: LOW-MEDIUMPublish articles on Hackernoon. Trending articles get newsletter inclusion.
Write a compelling technical article. Hackernoon articles rank well in Google and can be picked up by other newsletters.
URL: https://hackernoon.com Subscribers: Large platform readership + newsletter How to submit: Publish articles on Hackernoon. Trending articles get newsletter inclusion. Feature format: Content platform — publish a technical article about Enovari. Best strategy: Write a compelling technical article. Hackernoon articles rank well in Google and can be picked up by other newsletters. Priority: MEDIUM
Key Reminders
0 itemsPitch Strategy & Templates
The Perfect Pitch Email Formula
Subject Line Options (A/B test these):
General / curiosity hooks:
- "Your AI forgets everything. We fixed that."
- "Why does your AI start from zero every conversation?"
- "The AI memory problem (and the tool that solves it)"
- "New tool: Persistent memory for AI assistants (MCP integration)"
- "MCP-native memory layer for AI agents — just launched"
- "Open question: Why don't AI assistants have persistent memory yet?"
- "[Newsletter Name] feature pitch: Enovari, the AI memory layer"
- "Tool for your readers: AI memory that works across ChatGPT, Claude, and more"
- "Thought your readers would want to see this — AI memory platform"
- "Related to your [recent topic] piece — we built the memory layer for AI"
- "Your piece on [topic] inspired this — Enovari solves the context problem"
- Test A (curiosity): "Your AI forgets everything. We fixed that." — Pure intrigue, no product name
- Test B (utility): "New AI tool: persistent memory across ChatGPT, Claude, and more" — Clear value proposition
- Test C (personal): "Quick pitch for [Newsletter Name] — AI memory platform" — Direct and respectful of their time
- Test D (question): "Why does every AI conversation start from scratch?" — Opens a loop
- Test E (social proof): "[X] developers are already using this AI memory tool" — Authority signal
- Track which subject line gets responses and double down on that framing for Tier 3-4 newsletters.
- Hook (1 sentence) — Why should they care RIGHT NOW?
- What it is (1-2 sentences) — Crystal clear description
- Why it matters (1-2 sentences) — The problem it solves
- Social proof (1 sentence) — Traction, users, notable backers
- Ask (1 sentence) — What you want from them
Technical / developer hooks:
Newsletter-personalized hooks:
Newsjacking hooks (use when relevant):
Subject Line A/B Testing Strategy: When emailing multiple newsletters in the same tier, test different subject lines and track which gets the best open/response rates:
The 5-Part Pitch Structure:
Template Pitch Email for Enovari
Subject: Your AI forgets everything. We fixed that.Hi [Name],
I'm [Your Name], founder of Enovari. I've been reading [Newsletter Name]
for [time period] — loved the recent piece on [specific recent article].
We just launched Enovari (https://enovari.ai), a persistent memory platform
for AI assistants. In short: every time you start a new conversation with
ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI, it forgets everything you've ever told it.
Enovari fixes that.
It works across AI platforms via MCP (Model Context Protocol) integration —
your AI remembers your preferences, past conversations, project context,
and personal knowledge base, no matter which tool you're using.
We're seeing [X users / traction metric] since launch and the response
from the developer community has been [positive descriptor].
Would love to be considered for [Newsletter Name]'s tools section. Happy to
provide a demo, screenshots, or any additional info you need.
Thanks for your time,
[Your Name]
Founder, Enovari
https://enovari.ai
[Your Twitter handle]
Variations by Audience
For Technical Newsletters (AlphaSignal, Import AI, Latent Space, The Sequence):
Subject: MCP-native persistent memory for AI agentsHi [Name],
We built Enovari — a persistent, portable, structured memory layer for AI
assistants that works across platforms via MCP integration.
The architecture: [1-2 sentences about technical approach — memory types,
retrieval mechanism, cross-platform sync].
It solves the fundamental statefulness problem in current LLM interfaces.
Every conversation starts from zero. Enovari gives AI assistants a
persistent knowledge base that travels with the user.
We've seen [specific technical traction — GitHub stars, developer
sign-ups, integrations built by the community].
Open to sharing more technical details or doing a deep dive for your
audience. Here's a link: https://enovari.ai
[Your Name]
For Business/Productivity Newsletters (Superhuman AI, Morning Brew, The Prompt Daily):
Subject: Stop re-explaining everything to your AI (new tool)Hi [Name],
Quick pitch: Enovari (https://enovari.ai) gives your AI a permanent memory.
Instead of starting every ChatGPT/Claude conversation from scratch — re-explaining
your role, preferences, and context — Enovari remembers it all. Across every
AI platform you use.
Think of it as a knowledge base that your AI actually reads before every
conversation. It already knows who you are, what you're working on, and
how you like things done.
[Social proof — user count, testimonial, notable user]
Would love to be featured in [Newsletter Name]. Happy to provide anything
you need — screenshots, demo GIF, or a quick walkthrough.
[Your Name]
For Podcast Pitches (Latent Space, Changelog, AI for Humans):
Subject: Podcast guest pitch — the AI memory problemHi [Name],
I'm [Your Name], founder of Enovari. I'd love to come on [Podcast Name]
to talk about something I think your audience cares deeply about: why AI
assistants have no memory, and what it takes to fix that.
The conversation I'd love to have:
Why every AI conversation starts from zero (and why it doesn't have to)
How MCP (Model Context Protocol) enables cross-platform AI memory
The architecture behind persistent, portable AI memory
What changes when AI actually remembers your context I've been building in this space for [time] and can go deep on the
technical details. We have [traction metric] and the developer response
has been strong.
Happy to work around your schedule. Here's more about Enovari:
https://enovari.ai
[Your Name]
For Directory/Aggregator Sites (TAAFT, Future Tools, AI Valley, BetaList, Futurepedia):
Timing & Scheduling Strategy
When Each Newsletter Publishes
Understanding publish schedules is critical for pitching at the right time. Pitch 2-4 days before their publish date for weekly newsletters, and the day before or early morning of for daily newsletters.
| Newsletter | Frequency | Typical Publish Day | Pitch By | |||||||||
| The Rundown AI | Daily (weekdays) | Mon-Fri, AM ET | Day before, AM | |||||||||
| TLDR AI | Daily (weekdays) | Mon-Fri, early AM ET | Day before, AM | |||||||||
| Superhuman AI | Daily (weekdays) | Mon-Fri, AM ET | Day before, AM | |||||||||
| The Neuron | Daily (weekdays) | Mon-Fri, AM ET | Day before, AM | |||||||||
| AI Tool Report | Daily (weekdays) | Mon-Fri, AM ET | Day before, AM | |||||||||
| Ben's Bites | [VERIFY] | [VERIFY] | [VERIFY] | |||||||||
| AlphaSignal | Weekly | Wed/Thu | Mon-Tue | |||||||||
| The Batch | Weekly | Wednesday | Previous week | |||||||||
| Import AI | Weekly | Monday | Thu-Fri | |||||||||
| Latent Space | Weekly | Mid-week | Mon-Tue | |||||||||
| Console.dev | Weekly | Thursday | Mon-Tue | |||||||||
| Hacker Newsletter | Weekly | Friday | Wed | |||||||||
| Future Tools | Weekly | Friday | Wed-Thu | |||||||||
| Changelog | Weekly | Sunday | Wed-Thu | |||||||||
| ByteByteGo | Weekly | Tue/Wed | Previous week | |||||||||
| Dense Discovery | Weekly | Tuesday | Thu-Fri | |||||||||
| Last Week in AI | Weekly | Monday | Previous Thu-Fri | |||||||||
| Data Elixir | Weekly | Tuesday | Thu-Fri | |||||||||
| Day | Action | |||||||||||
| Monday | Submit to daily newsletters (The Rundown, TLDR, Superhuman). Editors often plan Mon-Tue for the week. Pitch weekly newsletters that publish Wed-Thu (AlphaSignal, Console.dev). | |||||||||||
| Tuesday | Follow up on Monday pitches if no response. Pitch weekly newsletters that publish Thu-Fri (Hacker Newsletter, Future Tools). Submit to directories (TAAFT, Future Tools, BetaList). | |||||||||||
| Wednesday | Submit to Product Hunt (Tue-Thu are best launch days). Pitch weekly newsletters that publish Fri-Sun (Changelog). Engage on AI Twitter. | |||||||||||
| Thursday | Pitch weekly newsletters that publish Mon-Tue (Import AI, Dense Discovery, Last Week in AI, Data Elixir). Submit to remaining directories. | |||||||||||
| Friday | Submit to Hacker News "Show HN" (Friday can be good — less competition, stories stay up longer over weekend). Light follow-ups on outstanding pitches. | |||||||||||
| Grade | Criteria | Action | ||||||||||
| A | 500+ sign-ups, high retention, audience fit | Pitch again quarterly, consider paid sponsorship | ||||||||||
| B | 100-500 sign-ups, decent retention | Pitch again with new angles | ||||||||||
| C | 25-100 sign-ups, mixed retention | Low-priority re-pitch | ||||||||||
| D | <25 sign-ups or poor audience fit | Don't re-pitch | ||||||||||
| # | Newsletter | Tier | Contact | Submitted | Date | Follow-up 1 | Follow-up 2 | Response | Featured? | Link | Traffic | Sign-ups |
| 1 | The Rundown AI | 1 | rowan@therundown.ai | [ ] | ||||||||
| 2 | TLDR AI | 1 | dan@tldr.tech | [ ] | ||||||||
| 3 | Ben's Bites | 1 | ben@bensbites.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 4 | Superhuman AI | 1 | zain@superhuman.ai | [ ] | ||||||||
| 5 | The Neuron | 1 | hello@theneurondaily.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 6 | AI Tool Report | 1 | mike@aitoolreport.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 7 | Morning Brew | 1 | tips@morningbrew.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 8 | Product Hunt | 1 | Launch event | [ ] | ||||||||
| 9 | AlphaSignal | 2 | @AlphaSignalAI | [ ] | ||||||||
| 10 | The Batch | 2 | thebatch@deeplearning.ai | [ ] | ||||||||
| 11 | Import AI | 2 | jack@jack-clark.net | [ ] | ||||||||
| 12 | AI Breakfast | 2 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 13 | TAAFT | 2 | via submit form | [ ] | ||||||||
| 14 | AI Weekly | 2 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 15 | Lenny's Newsletter | 2 | lenny@substack.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 16 | The AI Exchange | 2 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 17 | The Download (MIT) | 2 | press@technologyreview.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 18 | ByteByteGo | 2 | alex@bytebytego.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 19 | Smarter AI | 2 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 20 | AI Pedia Hub | 2 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 21 | Mindstream AI | 3 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 22 | The Prompt Daily | 3 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 23 | AI Solopreneur | 3 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 24 | AI Valley | 3 | via submit form | [ ] | ||||||||
| 25 | Unwind AI | 3 | @Saboo_Shubham_ | [ ] | ||||||||
| 26 | Last Week in AI | 3 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 27 | The Sequence | 3 | via Substack | [ ] | ||||||||
| 28 | Prompts Daily | 3 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 29 | AI Supremacy | 3 | via Substack | [ ] | ||||||||
| 30 | Davis Summarizes Papers | 3 | via Substack | [ ] | ||||||||
| 31 | Ahead of AI | 3 | via Substack | [ ] | ||||||||
| 32 | Hacker Newsletter | 3 | kale@hackernewsletter.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 33 | Dev.to | 3 | Publish article | [ ] | ||||||||
| 34 | Latent Space | 3 | @swyx | [ ] | ||||||||
| 35 | Future Tools | 3 | matt@futuretools.io | [ ] | ||||||||
| 36 | Console.dev | 3 | hello@console.dev | [ ] | ||||||||
| 37 | Stratechery | 3 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 38 | The Pragmatic Engineer | 3 | via Substack | [ ] | ||||||||
| 39 | AI for Humans | 3 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 40 | The Overfitted | 3 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 41 | Not a Bot | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 42 | AI Tidbits | 4 | via Substack | [ ] | ||||||||
| 43 | The AI Pulse | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 44 | AI Brews | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 45 | AINEWS | 4 | @swyx | [ ] | ||||||||
| 46 | Changelog | 4 | editors@changelog.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 47 | Pointer.io | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 48 | Software Lead Weekly | 4 | oren@softwareleadweekly.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 49 | AI Digest | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 50 | HN Digest | 4 | Post on HN | [ ] | ||||||||
| 51 | Dense Discovery | 4 | kai@densediscovery.com | [ ] | ||||||||
| 52 | Smashing Magazine | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 53 | Indie Hackers | 4 | Post in community | [ ] | ||||||||
| 54 | Starter Story | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 55 | The Hustle | 4 | tips@thehustle.co | [ ] | ||||||||
| 56 | Technically (Verge) | 4 | via Verge tips | [ ] | ||||||||
| 57 | Ars Technica | 4 | via tips page | [ ] | ||||||||
| 58 | Gradient Flow | 4 | via Substack | [ ] | ||||||||
| 59 | AI Snake Oil | 4 | via Substack | [ ] | ||||||||
| 60 | Data Elixir | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 61 | MLOps Community | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 62 | Deep Learning Weekly | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 63 | a16z AI Newsletter | 4 | via a16z | [ ] | ||||||||
| 64 | The Algorithm (MIT) | 4 | via MIT TR | [ ] | ||||||||
| 65 | Turing Post | 4 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 66 | GitHub Trending | 5 | Open source push | [ ] | ||||||||
| 67 | Hacker News | 5 | Show HN post | [ ] | ||||||||
| 68 | Reddit (AI subs) | 5 | Post in subreddits | [ ] | ||||||||
| 69 | AI Twitter/X | 5 | Engage key accounts | [ ] | ||||||||
| 70 | BetaList | 5 | via submit form | [ ] | ||||||||
| 71 | Uneed.best | 5 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 72 | ToolFinder.ai | 5 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 73 | Futurepedia | 5 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 74 | SaaS Weekly | 5 | via website | [ ] | ||||||||
| 75 | Hackernoon | 5 | Publish article | [ ] | ||||||||
| 76 | TLDR Web Dev | 1 | via TLDR | [ ] | ||||||||
| 77 | TLDR Founders | 1 | via TLDR | [ ] |