I'm your assistant. Not a chatbot. Not another app that forgets you the second you close it. I'm the one who actually knows you.
I remember things. I'm not magic. I'm just paying attention.
Let me show you what a day looks like.
"Good morning. Two meetings moved, rain by noon, and your sister emailed twice yesterday — be a good brother and email her back. I'll remind you."
Doris scanned 47 emails, 12 calendar changes, and the hourly forecast. She ranked what matters, dropped what doesn't, and wrote you a 30-second briefing — before you poured your coffee.
"Heads up — your 9:30 is across town and there's a delay on the A train. Leave by 8:25 and take the 1 instead. I'll open Maps with walking directions now."
She saw your 9:30 has a street address, checked transit status, pulled the weather (rain at 9), calculated walking time from the station, and added a buffer because she knows you're never early.
"That vendor proposal you were waiting on just came in. The rest is newsletters and receipts — I'll hold those for later."
23 new emails in the last two hours. Doris checked sender history, thread context, and your past behavior — you opened every email from this vendor within minutes. This one gets surfaced. The rest can wait.
"Sarah just texted about dinner Saturday at 7. Want me to add it? I already know the restaurant — she sent you the link last month."
Doris saw the iMessage, identified Sarah from your contacts, found the restaurant link in your conversation history from January, checked your Saturday calendar for conflicts, and drafted the event — address, time, and a reminder to leave by 6:30.
"Your 3pm with James Chen — he was just promoted to VP last week. You last met in October. Here's a quick recap of what you discussed."
She pulled James from your contacts, found his LinkedIn update, searched your email for past threads, located your October meeting notes, checked the meeting location and travel time, and assembled everything into a 15-second read.
"You're near Whole Foods — you're out of oat milk and Gabby asked for those frozen dumplings yesterday. Want me to pull up the full list?"
Your location pinged near the store. Doris checked your Reminders grocery list, scanned recent messages for anything food-related (Gabby's dumpling text from yesterday), and cross-referenced what you bought last week to flag what's probably running low.
"Quick wrap-up: tomorrow's clear except a 10am that moved to 11. Rain's done. And you never emailed your sister — maybe tomorrow morning?"
End-of-day sweep: tomorrow's calendar, open reminders, weather outlook, and anything from today that didn't get resolved — like that email. She keeps it short because she knows Wednesday evenings are your wind-down time.
"The school just sent next semester's schedule — dance on Mondays, theater Tuesdays, the whole thing. I've already added every date to your calendar through May."
Doris parsed a 1,200-word email from Riverside Elementary, extracted 6 recurring events with dates, created calendar entries for each one through May 22nd, and filed the original. She'll remind you the night before each new activity starts.
"You're two blocks from Blick Art — remember when Levi mentioned needing poster board for his project? Might be a good time to grab it."
Three days ago, Levi mentioned poster board in a conversation. No reminder was set — Doris just remembered. When your afternoon meeting put you near the art supply store, she connected the dots and surfaced it at exactly the right moment.
"Your flight's delayed 45 minutes, but your Charlotte connection still works — 22-minute buffer. I texted Gabby. I'll keep watching it."
Doris detected the delay, calculated the downstream impact on your connecting flight, determined it was still makeable, texted Gabby the update, and set herself to monitor for further changes — all within seconds of the airline posting the delay.
"It's dropping to 28° tonight upstate. Nobody's there, so I bumped the heat to 62 to protect the pipes. I'll dial it back tomorrow afternoon."
Doris checked tonight's forecast for the Hudson Valley house, cross-referenced the occupancy, raised the thermostat remotely to prevent pipe freeze, and scheduled a reset for tomorrow afternoon when temps recover.
"Saturday's wide open after 11. That trail you mentioned two weeks ago? It's 55° and sunny — perfect day. Gabby saved a farm stand nearby. I mapped the whole route."
Four sources, one plan: your Saturday calendar (open), a trail you mentioned in passing two weeks ago, tomorrow's forecast (ideal), and a farm stand Gabby bookmarked. Doris searched the trail, calculated drive time, and assembled the full route — without anyone asking.
"90-minute drive — I loaded Gabby's playlist first, then that podcast episode that dropped this morning. It'll finish right as you arrive."
Doris calculated the drive time, found Gabby's saved playlist, noticed a new episode of your favorite podcast dropped that morning, and assembled the queue — playlist first for the scenic part, podcast timed to end at arrival.
An assistant who doesn't wait to be asked. She pays attention, connects the dots, and keeps it simple.
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