Did this land?

The world we’re building toward.


Imagine waking up and your devices already know your day.

Not because they checked a server. Not because you opened an app and asked. Because the intelligence layer lives with you. On your hardware, across your phone and laptop, syncing over your home network while you slept. It read the messages that came in. It knows your calendar. It noticed that the meeting at 9am is with someone you haven’t spoken to in three months and that the last conversation had an open item you never closed.

By the time you pick up your phone, the briefing is ready. You didn’t ask for it. It was just there.


One brain. All your devices.

Your phone and your laptop are used by one person. Today, they don’t know that. Each device holds a fragment of your context. Neither has the full picture. The intelligence they contain is isolated, sandboxed, unable to reason across both.

In the world we’re building, that changes.

Your phone knows your life: messages, location, health, the texture of your day. Your laptop knows your work: documents, email, the projects you’re actually thinking about. A Personal AI OS spans both. It holds the context from every device you own, unified into a single working model of who you are and what you’re doing.

It syncs over your own network. No cloud relay. No data leaving your home. Just two devices that finally talk to each other through the intelligence layer they share.


Proactive, not reactive.

Every AI product today waits for you to open it.

That’s a fundamental mismatch with how intelligence is actually useful. A great assistant doesn’t wait to be asked. They notice things. They prepare you before you know you need it. They surface what matters and handle what doesn’t require you.

The Personal AI OS we’re building works the same way.

It sees your calendar fill up and notices when you’re overcommitted. It reads an incoming message and decides whether it needs your attention now or can wait. It knows you have a meeting in 20 minutes and surfaces everything relevant without being asked: past conversations, open items, shared documents. It hears your partner mention dinner plans in a text and creates the calendar event.

You don’t pull intelligence out of it. It pushes what’s relevant to you, at the right moment, on the right device. From reactive to proactive. From a tool you use to an intelligence that works alongside you.


Private by architecture. Always.

In the world we’re building, privacy isn’t a setting. It’s not a promise. It’s not something you configure.

It’s the default output of the architecture.

Your messages never leave your device. Your health data never touches a server. Your financial patterns, your relationships, your half-formed thoughts at midnight. All of it processed locally, stored locally, never transmitted. Not because we say so. Because the system has no mechanism to do otherwise.

Open source means you don’t have to take our word for it. Anyone can read the code. Anyone can verify what leaves the device and what doesn’t. The answer is nothing. Checkable by anyone.


Intelligence for everyone.

For two hundred years, having a personal intelligence layer was a privilege reserved for the powerful. Someone who managed your correspondence, prepared your meetings, tracked your commitments, and handled the coordination overhead of a consequential life.

Not anymore.

The device that 4 billion people already carry in their pocket has enough compute to run a capable AI model, fully offline, at real-time speed. The models are open-weight and free. The infrastructure costs nothing to run.

The only thing standing between a billion people and their own private intelligence layer is software that takes it seriously.

That’s what we’re building. Not for executives. Not for knowledge workers above a certain income threshold. For anyone with a phone. For anyone who has ever needed help thinking through a hard problem, tracking a commitment they made, preparing for a conversation that mattered, or just finding the message they know they received three weeks ago.

The same intelligence layer that made some people more effective for two centuries. Now ambient, private, and in everyone’s hands.


Download Off Grid for iPhone or Android. Open source. View on GitHub.