Today, at a Glance

Open Aether in the morning and your briefing is already waiting. Today's weather (dress for rain). Your schedule (three meetings, lunch is free). Anything arriving (that package ships today). Bills due this week. The thing you told Aether to remind you about. And one proactive suggestion you didn't ask for but will appreciate: "Traffic on 101 is bad — leave by 8:15 or take 280 instead."

It's not an alert stream. It's a briefing — the kind a great assistant would hand you with your coffee. Calm, complete, and personalized. Everything you need. Nothing you don't.

Tuesday, October 22
🌧 58°F, rain after 2 PM — bring a jacket
📅 3 meetings · Lunch free · Last meeting ends 4:30
🔔 Reminder: call the dentist about Noah's appointment
📦 Amazon package arriving today (headphone adapter)
⚠ Heavy traffic on 101 — leave by 8:15 or take 280

Personalized, Not Generic

Your schedule, interpreted. Not just "you have a meeting at 10." Aether adds context: "10 AM — product review with Sarah. You wanted to bring up the onboarding flow redesign." It pulls from your notes, your past conversations, and your calendar.

Your commitments, tracked. You told someone you'd send them something by Friday. Aether remembers, even if you don't, and adds it to Thursday's briefing: "You told Marcus you'd share the proposal by end of week."

Your routines, respected. It learns when you check your briefing and adapts. Early riser? It's ready at 6 AM. Night owl? It shifts to emphasize the evening ahead. Weekend briefings are lighter — more about personal life, less about work.

10:00 AM Context
Product review with Sarah — you wanted to bring up the onboarding flow redesign. She shared mockups last Thursday.

Built For

Anyone who checks their phone first thing in the morning and immediately feels overwhelmed. People whose days are complex enough that they need a system to hold the full picture. Parents who need to remember three different kids' schedules before 8 AM. Professionals who want to walk into their day prepared instead of reactive. Anyone who's ever forgotten something important because it was buried in notifications.

[SYS]