A few useful tools. Open source, privacy-respecting, no ads.
This website is in active development and not yet ready for public release. If you stumbled upon it by accident โ welcome to the closed club of pre-release testers. Feedback is welcome via the contact form.
few.lt is a small collection of useful tools built for people who value simplicity, transparency, and privacy. Tools require sending data to a server, but the code behind everything is open source and auditable. AI-powered tools are available on a pay-as-you-go basis with no subscription and no hidden markup โ you pay the real cost of running a quality model, plus a small margin that keeps the lights on. No flat fees, no garbage-tier models quietly substituted to cut costs.
It is a small side-project built and maintained by one person. It is self-hosted on modest infrastructure, and 100% uptime is not guaranteed. We are not ready for big commitments โ credits are capped at $5 per top-up, so please do not treat this as a mission-critical service. If you need reliability guarantees or higher usage limits, the source code is freely available and self-hosting is encouraged.
A totally unhinged idea: if few.lt tools work in a modern OS shell, why not DOS? Since batch scripting is too limited, a small C wrapper was compiled with DJGPP and a plain HTTP proxy was set up โ because DOS can't handle TLS. Should work on real vintage hardware from i386 upward (requires 32-bit protected mode). Check out DOS Integration and unlock AI on your childhood's computer!
The browser console is ready, and the router endpoint is set up. Bash integration has been completed. PowerShell integration, the conventional web interface for tools, and user billing functionality are on their way!
A few tools are already in place to test it all out. More to come!
The work on the service has begun. I've decided to make this service open-source and self-hostable. It will be licensed under the EUPL v1.2 license. As the core for it, I've decided to use my CMS โ PnyxCMS, which is not yet available publicly as a standalone product as I am writing it, but will be one day (I promise).
After catching a nice three-letter domain name by accident, an idea to create a URL shortener came to my mind. However, the prospect of just another URL shortener would be too boring, and within half an hour, I outlined the concept of this service.