Pulse is the private memory layer for the age of ambient AI — a secure, user-owned context system that follows you across devices, tools, and agents, turning scattered activity into shared memory. Today it ships as a macOS assistant that briefs your morning, tracks your working context, and reflects on your day — connecting to your Gmail and Google Calendar with your consent.
AI is already inside every device, app, inbox, calendar, browser, and workflow. Every platform has an assistant. Every company is deploying agents. Every tool is learning how to act.
Your coding agent does not know what your meeting assistant heard. Your inbox agent does not know what your calendar changed. Your CRM does not know what moved in the deck. Your phone does not know what your laptop helped you decide.
So the human is still the integration layer. Pulse changes that.
Pulse is not another agent, and not another assistant trapped inside one tool. It is the memory the other agents share — the neutral context layer that turns scattered AI activity into one continuous, auditable story, owned by the person it's about.
Every agent you grant access to begins inside the story you're already inside. The next one inherits it. The one after that inherits it. Your memory persists, even as the tools around it change.
Pulse runs at every scale — from a person who wants their tools to remember them, to a team that's tired of repeating the deal, to a company building its own institutional brain.
The agents you already use know fragments of you. Pulse becomes the place those fragments belong — yours, encrypted, portable. Every assistant you grant access to starts inside your story, not from zero.
Every meeting begins where the last one ended. Every handoff carries context. Every agent your team uses inherits the team's memory, not just the prompt it was given. Knowledge stops leaving the building when someone closes a laptop.
Every internal agent, copilot, and workflow today is built on top of context you have to rebuild for each one. Pulse becomes the durable memory layer underneath — governed, auditable, owned by your org — that every model and agent draws from.
The platforms are racing to ship agents. The wrappers are racing to ship agents. What none of them are racing to build is the memory the agents share — owned by the person, not the platform, and persistent across whichever tool you use next.
An agent that already knows you. A team that doesn't repeat itself. A company whose context outlasts its model of the month.
Your agents already know what moved overnight, what's waiting on you, and the decision the rest of the day is about — because they share your memory, not just yesterday's prompt.
The meeting AI hands context to the inbox agent. The inbox agent hands context to the doc agent. Nobody re-explains the deal. Nobody starts cold.
What was decided, what shifted, who is now waiting on whom. Not by reading every tool — by reading the one memory all of them just wrote to.
Every model, every agent, every new tool you adopt begins inside the story you're already inside. Memory is the layer that outlasts the surface.
Pulse is private by architecture. Your memory layer lives close to you, encrypted, and is never the product. We sell the tool, not the trace it makes.
Pulse works above the platforms — not beneath them. Your memory persists when your device, model, app, or agent changes. The spine outlasts the surfaces.
Every claim Pulse makes about your life can be traced back to the moment it came from. Ambient intelligence has to be auditable, or it isn't trustworthy.
The Pulse app for macOS opens your day with a morning brief, keeps a quiet working-mode view of what you're doing, and closes with an evening reflection of where your time actually went. A companion iPhone app carries your brief and check-ins with you.
To do this well, Pulse can connect to your Google account — with your explicit consent, through Google's standard sign-in. Here is exactly what that means:
Pulse reads recent threads to build your morning brief and surface messages relevant to your current work. At your direction it can label, draft, and send replies — and shows you every email before it is sent.
Pulse reads your upcoming events to plan your day and timeline, and creates new events only when you explicitly ask it to.
Your Google data is stored locally on your Mac and never sold, never shared with advertisers or data brokers, and never used to train generalized AI models — per the Limited Use requirements of the Google API Services User Data Policy.
The full disclosure of what Pulse collects, stores, and shares is in our Privacy Policy. Pulse runs on macOS 15 or later and is currently in private preview — for access or support, write to pillicdj@gmail.com.
Not another agent.
Not another chatbot.
Not another platform copilot.
The shared memory underneath your people, your teams, your company, and your agents.