We're building the agent you can actually rely on.
Not the one that demos well. The one you hand things to and stop thinking about.
The first wave of personal agents was genuinely magic. For a moment it felt like the future had arrived — something that took initiative instead of waiting to be prompted. Then people started depending on them, and the magic turned into maintenance. You debugged them after every update. You taught the same task over and over. The thing that was supposed to save you work quietly became work.
Leaner tools came along and pulled people across, but none of them closed the gap that actually matters: an agent will store facts about you and still fail to recall them the way a good colleague would. It holds the information and misses the moment.
We started Gini to close that gap. The bar is simple: a personal agent you can run without ever reading a log line. One that handles the work — all of it, work and life — and earns your trust by doing it.
What we believe
You delegate to it; you don't manage it.
If you're supervising the agent, it isn't doing its job.
Learning should stick.
A thing you teach it today is a thing it owns next week.
Your data is yours.
Local-first isn't a feature. It's the default.
The interface should respect your attention.
Show the work. Ask only when it matters.
Earned trust beats impressive demos.
You should rely on it because it's worked — not because it looked good once.