I think people really like how it's free (runs on google app scripts) and open source.
I've personally moved onto google's free gmail calendar scheduling tool, which strangely took pretty long to come to market. Calendly stretches back to ... 2013?
Scheduling, oddly feels a little niche (maybe less so today?), when it shouldn't be. Maybe there some more opportunity there.
> ...he briefly attended a pro-Palestinian protest. In April 2025, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) sent Google an administrative subpoena requesting his data.
It's perfectly okay. An AI isn't a lawyer and can't grant you attorney-client privilege. It's just a notebook that can talk back to you, and you've made the mistake of telling it all the details of your case.
I don't agree with this direction. There is entirely too much cognitive load in the interface. The challenge now is how to distill the massive output and information of agent work - this is just surfacing it all to you
Would really love to see a web api standard for on device llms. This could get us closer. Some in-browser language model usage could be very powerful. In the interim maybe a little protocol spec + a discovery protocol used with browser plugins, web apps could detect and interface with on-device llms making it universally available.
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