Vision

A personal assistant
computer you can
actually trust.

Like having a great assistant who has their own computer: one persistent workspace, clear permissions, and continuity that follows the work instead of restarting per app.

Short-term mission: reduce dropped balls without asking people to adopt a brand new inbox or workflow.

Soft system image representing one assistant state across work surfaces

Current wedge

Start with follow-up, meeting prep, and context recovery. Earn trust with useful work, then expand the surface area.

Why it matters

The product only works if it stays legible. Memory, actioning, and approval have to feel calm and reviewable.

What Amby is

One assistant state, not a new prompt every time.

Amby is a private assistant computer that lives online and stays on. It keeps one working memory, prepares follow-up and prep in the background, and gives you clean review points before anything important moves.

Why now

The gap is continuity, not capability.

AI is already useful for writing, summarizing, and organization. What is still missing is a product that remembers safely, acts with permission, and stays understandable under pressure.

Who it is for

Busy people with real workflow load.

Amby is for people whose work really does spill across inboxes, calendars, and messages: operators, founders, recruiters, consultants, and small-team professionals who feel the cost when follow-ups slip.

Where it goes next

From prep layer to continuous personal computing.

The long-term direction is one persistent assistant you can reach from messaging, email, calendar, desktop, and phone without fragmenting the work. New surfaces should extend the same assistant, not create a new one.

Operating principle

Your personal follow-up and prep layer.

Amby should feel always on, permission-based, and reviewable. The product earns trust by keeping memory coherent, actions explicit, and cross-surface access simple.

Persistent memoryReview before sendPermission-based actioningCross-surface continuity

What success looks like

Meetings are prepped before they start.

Follow-ups do not depend on memory alone.

Returning to work does not require re-explaining it.