Reading a Tool Profile
Last updated: 2026-05-18
Reading a Tool Profile Page
Every tool in the directory has a dedicated profile page. Here's what each section contains.
Overview
The first thing you see is the tool's logo, name, vendor, and a short description. Below that are key features (a quick list of what it does well), pros, and sometimes a demo video.
The pros section is honest. We write both the good and the bad — a tool profile isn't a sales page.
If you're logged in, you'll see Add to Stack and Watchlist buttons here.
Technical Intelligence
This tab covers how the tool is built and how it performs. It includes a technical audit with scores for API robustness and latency, a list of platforms the tool runs on (web, desktop, mobile, API), and its core capabilities (multi-modal, tool use, etc.).
Use this tab when you're evaluating integration quality or need to understand the technical trade-offs.
Pricing Intelligence
This is where you find the full pricing breakdown across tiers: free plan details, paid tiers, and enterprise pricing where available.
For API-based tools there's a token calculator — enter your expected usage and get a monthly cost estimate. There's also a side-by-side tier comparison showing what each plan includes.
Integrations
Native integrations the tool supports — Slack, Notion, Zapier, GitHub, and so on. Use this to see whether it'll connect to the rest of your stack without custom work.
Company & Trust
Company information, website, social links, and compliance badges (SOC 2, EU AI Act). A FAQ section covers common questions about the tool.
Similar Tools
At the bottom of the profile you'll see tools in the same category. Use these when you want to compare alternatives before making a decision.