An independent take on the AI economy
AIWiki is a small editorial team writing about the AI tools, side hustles and productivity habits that actually move the needle. We buy our own subscriptions, test before we recommend, and tell readers when something isn't worth the money.
What we cover
Three beats: AI tools (reviews, comparisons, hands-on tutorials), online income (freelancing, affiliate, digital products) and productivity & tech (workflows, automation, the apps we actually keep installed).
How we work
Every guide goes through a writer and an editor before it ships. Reviews are based on hands-on use — we don't recommend tools we haven't opened ourselves. Read the full editorial policy, fact-checking policy and AI usage policy.
How we make money
Some links on AIWiki are affiliate links. If you click through and pay for a tool, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. Affiliate revenue funds the site — it never decides what we recommend. See terms for details.
Meet the editors
Mira Chen
AI Tools Editor
Mira covers practical AI tools for small teams. Before joining the AIWiki desk she spent six years building automation workflows for marketing agencies and still keeps a Notion full of half-finished prompt experiments.
Daniel Okafor
Productivity Writer
Daniel writes about focus, calendars and the small habits that compound. He runs a weekly review obsessively and has tested almost every task manager so you do not have to.
Priya Raman
Online Business Writer
Priya covers freelancing, digital products and the messy reality of building income online. She has launched four products of her own — two of them flopped, which makes her notes worth reading.
Sam Whitfield
Tutorials Editor
Sam writes the step-by-step pieces. Former technical writer turned editor, his rule is simple: if a guide does not work end-to-end on a fresh machine, it does not ship.
Elena Márquez
Editor-in-Chief
Elena leads the AIWiki desk. She edits every feature for clarity, sources and what she calls the "would I send this to a friend?" test. Twelve years in tech publishing, two of them spent fact-checking AI claims.