Gini gets it done
Your inbox. The 47 things on your list. The holiday you keep meaning to plan. The Q3 deck. The follow-up you've been avoiding
One agent, on your machine, that just handles it
Activity streaming
Most AI tells you what to do. Gini just does it.
There's a difference between a tool you have to manage and one you can actually delegate to.
Most AI tools They talk about the work
- Summarize your inbox and hand it back
- Draft a suggestion you have to finish
- Forget the procedure by next week
- Bury everything in a chat thread
Gini Does it
- Runs the follow-up. Sends it.
- Checks its own work. Fixes it.
- Owns the skill once you've taught it
- Shows what's in flight, not what was said
Gini remembers and learns.
Never re-brief it
Gini holds your context like a colleague who's been with you forever. The projects, the people, the reasons. You stop being the memory for your own assistant.
Teach it once
Show Gini how you want something done. It owns the skill next week — runs the procedure, checks the result, corrects itself when it's off. Not autocomplete. Actual learning.
See the work, not a thread
Gini doesn't live in a chat window. You get a live view of what's running, queued, and waiting on you. Hand stuff off. Continue your day.
Ask once. It already has the context.
Type what you need. Gini pulls the relevant history together on its own — no folders to point it at, no re-explaining.
Teach it your way once. It stays taught.
Other agents forget the moment you close the window. Gini doesn't — flip between teaching it and watching it run a week later.
Quietly handling it for people who don't have time.
"I stopped reviewing every draft about a week in. It just writes them the way I would now."
"Booked our entire trip to Lisbon while I was in a meeting. Hotels, dinner reservations, everything. I just paid."
"It's the first agent I taught something to that still knew it the next week. That changed everything."
"My inbox went from 400 to 8 key to-dos. I didn't lift a finger."
Hand off the first thing now.
One command, two minutes, one task off your list. It only gets better from there.