A curated firehose of ChatGPT experiments
Someone had to catalog the chaos of early ChatGPT hacks, extensions, and fever dreams.

What it does A hand-maintained list of ChatGPT demos, tools, articles, and oddities—organized into buckets like “Prompting,” “Coding,” “Assistants,” and the ominously named “Thought-provoking.” It is essentially a link blog in README form, last updated March 2023.
The interesting bit The curation has personality. Sahar Mor starred particular entries and included genuinely weird experiments—running a VM inside ChatGPT, an artist talking to her “inner child” via fine-tuned notes, hallucinated chat rooms inside hallucinated chat rooms. The list captures a specific moment when developers were duct-taping GPT-3.5 into every interface they could find.
Key highlights
- ~80 links across 10 categories, from VS Code extensions to WhatsApp bots to RPA automation
- Heavy Twitter-sourced demos (many now likely broken or rate-limited into oblivion)
- Several unofficial API clients documented, including reverse-engineered ones—timely for the pre-official-API era
- Notable: a DuplexGPT demo for booking appointments without calling, and a terminal copilot that generates shell commands
- Points to a separate Notion database for open-source Generative AI libraries
Caveats
- Last updated March 2023; the ChatGPT API landscape has shifted dramatically since
- Many Twitter demo links are fragile—threads get deleted, accounts get suspended, APIs change
- No quality bar beyond curation; some entries are one-off hacks, others are maintained projects
Verdict Worth a nostalgic scroll if you missed the 2022-2023 gold rush, or if you are researching how fast a developer ecosystem can form around a new API. Skip it if you need current, tested tools—this is a time capsule, not a registry.