u/MediocreTone4380

▲ 12 r/u_MediocreTone4380+6 crossposts

Hey everyone,

I’ve been working on https://toolswalla.com, a growing collection of simple, fast and practical online tools designed to solve everyday problems (no signup, no clutter).

The goal is to make things quick, lightweight and actually useful, whether it’s small productivity tasks, conversions or handy utilities you don’t want to install apps for.

I would really appreciate if you could take a minute to visit the site, try out a few tools and share your honest feedback (good or bad both are welcome)

Your support and suggestions will genuinely help me improve and grow this into something more valuable for everyone.

Thanks a lot in advance to anyone who gives it a try. 🙏

reddit.com
u/MediocreTone4380 — 1 day ago

Hey everyone,

I’ve been working on https://toolswalla.com, a growing collection of simple, fast and practical online tools designed to solve everyday problems (no signup, no clutter).

The goal is to make things quick, lightweight and actually useful, whether it’s small productivity tasks, conversions or handy utilities you don’t want to install apps for.

I would really appreciate if you could take a minute to visit the site, try out a few tools and share your honest feedback (good or bad both are welcome)

Your support and suggestions will genuinely help me improve and grow this into something more valuable for everyone.

Thanks a lot in advance to anyone who gives it a try. 🙏

toolswalla.com
u/MediocreTone4380 — 7 days ago
▲ 3 r/u_MediocreTone4380+1 crossposts

Hey everyone,

I’ve been working on https://toolswalla.com, a growing collection of simple, fast and practical online tools designed to solve everyday problems (no signup, no clutter).

The goal is to make things quick, lightweight and actually useful, whether it’s small productivity tasks, conversions or handy utilities you don’t want to install apps for.

I would really appreciate if you could take a minute to visit the site, try out a few tools and share your honest feedback (good or bad both are welcome)

Your support and suggestions will genuinely help me improve and grow this into something more valuable for everyone.

Thanks a lot in advance to anyone who gives it a try. 🙏

reddit.com
u/MediocreTone4380 — 7 days ago

It started at 9:00 AM.

People all over the world got a simple notification on their phones:

“Your death: 17 Aug 2061, 4:12 PM.”

No app name. No explanation. Just that.

At first, people laughed. Some thought it was a prank. Others assumed it was a new AI feature gone wrong.

But then the news started.

A man in Japan saw his time as 9:34 AM… and he died exactly at 9:34 AM.

A woman in Germany saw 10:02 AM… same thing.

No mistakes.

No delays.

Whatever sent that message… it was accurate.

Panic spread faster than anything ever before.

People checked their phones again and again. Some screamed. Some fainted. Some just sat quietly, staring at the screen.

Ravi looked at his.

“17 Aug 2061, 4:12 PM.”

He did the math.

Thirty-six more years.

He let out a breath he didn’t know he was holding.

Around him, reactions were different.

One of his colleagues started crying. “I have two days,” he kept repeating.

Another person laughed like nothing mattered anymore.

The world changed in a few hours.

Flights were cancelled. Markets crashed. Hospitals filled with people who weren’t even sick, just scared.

Some people quit their jobs immediately.

Some confessed things they had been hiding for years.

Some just disappeared.

And some… stopped caring about anything at all.

Because now, everyone knew.

Not “one day.”

Not “maybe.”

An exact moment.

The internet exploded with theories.

“AI did this.”

“It’s a government experiment.”

“It’s aliens.”

Nobody really knew.

But one thing became clear:

The predictions were always right.

Every single one.

Days passed.

Then weeks.

The world slowly adjusted to the truth.

A strange calm replaced the panic.

People started living differently.

A man who had 40 years left started learning music.

A woman who had 3 months left traveled the world non-stop.

A boy who had 2 days left spent all his time with his parents, laughing more than he ever had.

Ravi tried to go back to normal life.

But normal didn’t exist anymore.

Every decision felt different now.

Because there was always a countdown in the back of his mind.

One night, his daughter asked him, “Papa, when will you die?”

Ravi froze.

He didn’t want to answer.

But she showed her phone.

“Mine says 2088.”

She smiled.

Ravi forced a smile back.

“That’s very far,” he said.

Then she asked something that hit harder.

“When did your message come?”

Ravi thought for a moment.

“9:01 AM,” he said.

She tilted her head.

“Mine came at 9:00 AM.”

Ravi didn’t think much of it at first.

But later that night, something felt off.

He checked online.

People were sharing their message times.

Most had received it at exactly 9:00 AM.

A few at 9:00:01… 9:00:02…

Tiny delays.

Milliseconds.

Seconds.

Ravi kept scrolling.

His heart started beating faster.

He searched deeper.

Forums. Threads. Hidden discussions.

And then he saw it.

A pattern.

The later your message arrived…

The sooner you would die.

Ravi’s hands went cold.

He checked again.

9:01 AM.

He went back to his death time.

36 years.

That didn’t match the pattern.

Or did it?

Days later, a new theory went viral.

“This isn’t a prediction.”

“It’s a queue.”

People started testing it.

They tracked new deaths.

Compared message times.

The pattern held.

Those who received the message earliest had the longest lives left.

Those who got it later… had less time.

And the very last person to receive it…

Nobody could find them.

Ravi stopped sleeping properly.

Something didn’t make sense.

If his message came late… why did he still have so many years left?

He started digging deeper.

He checked logs, timestamps, everything he could find.

Then one night, he noticed something strange.

His phone time.

It was 1 minute behind.

His message didn’t come at 9:01.

It came at 9:00.

Exactly.

Ravi felt a sudden relief.

Until he looked at one more thing.

The original system clock.

Not his phone.

The global timestamp.

9:01:47 AM.

He wasn’t early.

He wasn’t average.

He was… very late.

That night, his daughter came to him again.

“Papa, are you scared?” she asked.

Ravi looked at her.

For a moment, he didn’t answer.

Then he said quietly,

“No.”

But for the first time in his life…

He knew exactly when fear would end.

reddit.com
u/MediocreTone4380 — 17 days ago

Ravi didn’t notice when it started.

At first, AI just made things easier. It helped him write emails faster, fix issues at work, and even suggest what to eat or watch. Life became smooth. No overthinking, no stress. Just answers, ready anytime. It felt like having a smart friend who never got tired.

Slowly, he stopped trying.

Whenever a problem came, he asked AI. When he had to reply to someone, AI helped. Even small things, like planning his day or choosing food, were no longer his decisions. It saved time, and honestly, it felt good. Why struggle when something else can do it better?

Days turned into months.

Ravi didn’t realize how much he had changed. Earlier, he used to enjoy solving problems. Now, he just waited for solutions. Earlier, he used to think before speaking. Now, he just checked what AI suggested. Even small choices felt difficult without help.

At home, things were changing too.

His daughter had an AI companion. It told her stories, answered her questions, even comforted her when she felt sad. Ravi watched her talk to it for hours, smiling like it was a real friend. At first, it felt harmless. Maybe even helpful.

But sometimes, it felt strange.

One evening, she asked the AI, “Why do people feel scared?”

The AI gave a perfect answer.

Ravi stood there quietly. He realized he didn’t even try to answer.

That thought stayed with him.

Then one day, everything stopped.

No warning. No message. Just silence.

AI tools didn’t work. Phones stopped suggesting things. Systems at work went blank. People started panicking. Messages flooded in. Nobody knew what to do.

Ravi stared at his screen.

A simple issue came up. Something he would have solved easily before. But now, he didn’t know where to begin. He waited. Maybe AI would come back.

It didn’t.

Minutes passed. Then hours.

Finally, he forced himself to try.

It was slow. He made mistakes. He had to read things carefully, think step by step, and try again. It felt frustrating. He wasn’t used to this anymore.

But something strange happened.

He started remembering.

How he used to work. How he used to think. How he used to solve problems without help. It wasn’t fast, but it felt real. Like using a muscle that had been asleep for too long.

By evening, he fixed the issue.

Not perfectly. Not quickly.

But he did it himself.

That night, his daughter came to him.

“Papa, why do people feel scared?” she asked again.

This time, Ravi didn’t look at a screen.

He paused, thought for a moment, and said, “Because sometimes we forget how to handle things on our own.”

She nodded and walked away.

Ravi sat quietly after that.

Life without AI felt harder.

But also… more real.

When the systems came back the next day, everything returned to normal. People went back to using AI for everything. The panic disappeared like nothing had happened.

But Ravi didn’t go back completely.

He still used AI.

Just not for everything.

Now, when a problem came, he tried first. When his daughter asked something, he answered first. AI became a tool again, not a habit.

Because now he understood something simple.

AI didn’t fail that day.

We did.

reddit.com
u/MediocreTone4380 — 17 days ago