Knows your people, your projects, your deals.
Wilson plugs into the tools you already use — mail, calendar, chat, code, CRM, docs. Ask "what did finance email me about this week?" and get an actual answer, because Wilson already read the thread.
Wilson reads your email, calendar, Slack, and projects. When you ask it something it doesn't start with "can you give me more context?" It just answers.
You open Claude and type three paragraphs of context. You paste a Slack thread into ChatGPT. You re-explain your project to Cursor for the fifth time this week.
These tools are smart. They just don't know anything about you.
Every new chat is a new stranger. Wilson keeps one brain that grows with you — the more you use it, the less you have to say.
Wilson learns your voice from your actual sent mail. The drafts sound like drafts you wrote.
Replaces Superwhisper, Raycast Pro habits, most of your Claude tabs. Keeps the apps you love, talks to them for you.
Wilson plugs into the tools you already use — mail, calendar, chat, code, CRM, docs. Ask "what did finance email me about this week?" and get an actual answer, because Wilson already read the thread.
"Open Linear and check the sprint board." Wilson uses the same accessibility APIs screen readers use, so it works with everything.
Wilson reads the thread, knows the recipient, and drafts in your voice. It leaves send to you, always.
"Meeting with the design lead in 15. Last email was about the new roadmap." Scored by who matters, not what's loudest. Morning brief when you wake up. Nudges when something needs attention.
"Start Claude in my current project." Wilson opens the terminal, injects project context, rewrites your prompt for the model. 10 words in, 200 out.
Grabs the text, the URL, the app you're in, summarizes, files it. Screenshots too, with OCR. Findable by fuzzy intent a month later.
Lives in your menu bar. Apple Silicon only.
Not a form. A conversation. It reads documents you point at, learns your writing style. The 10 minutes here is what makes it useful.
Say "connect Gmail" — Wilson walks you through OAuth with clickable links right in the chat. No YAML, no terminal.
Click the orb. Ask. It already knows what you're working on.
Wilson's knowledge graph — everything it learns about you — lives locally. Only the minimum needed to answer a prompt is sent to a model, and nothing is kept on a server after.
Your knowledge graph is SQLite on your machine. Not our cloud. Not anyone's.
OAuth tokens for Gmail, Slack, Calendar, GitHub sit in your Mac's keychain. They never hit a server.
Wilson writes the email. You click send. There's no setting that lets Wilson send on its own.
One button wipes the brain, tokens, local data. Nothing lingers.
Wilson is in early access on macOS. A small, opinionated release while it finds its edges.