Jarvis - Don't leave the moment. Ask from here.

by
Most AI is a place you go. Jarvis is the assistant beside your screen. Press Cmd-/ and ask about the email, design, or thread in front of you — it sees the moment, connects to your apps, remembers what matters. Don't leave the moment. Ask from here.

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Maker
📌
Hi Product Hunt — Mihai here, the founder of Jarvis. I'm 16, I built this solo from Romania, and this is the first time I'm showing it widely. The idea came from a feeling I couldn't shake: the models are already smart enough. What's still wrong is the distance to them. Every time I wanted to ask something, I had to leave the thing I was doing — open another tab, drag in a screenshot, re-explain who I am and what I'm looking at — and do that again, and again, every single time. The intelligence was there. The interface was just too far away. So I built the version I wanted: an assistant that lives beside the screen instead of in another window. You press Cmd-/ and Jarvis appears right where you are. It can see what you're looking at, so you don't re-explain context. It's connected to the apps where your work already lives — Gmail, Slack, Notion, Linear, GitHub, Calendar, Drive, and 30+ more — so it can pull real things and act on them. It remembers what matters across sessions, so you never start from zero. And you can talk to it — double-tap Control to talk about what's on screen, double-tap Option to dictate. What makes it different: most assistants are a destination you open. Jarvis is the assistant beside the work — it starts from your screen, not a blank box; it lives one shortcut away, not one tab away; and it remembers, so the second ask is never from zero. The strange thing I noticed once it was close: I started asking more. When AI is far, you only ask the big worth-it questions. When it's one shortcut away, you ask the small, natural ones too — and it quietly becomes part of how you think. It's on macOS, Windows, and Linux. Free to start — about 15 requests a week — with a 14-day free Pro trial (unlimited), then two paid tiers if you want more ($16/mo Pro, $32/mo Max). Press/media page with the story, photos and facts: I'll be here all day — privacy, how the screen-reading works, which models it routes across, anything. Ask away. Don't leave the moment. Ask from here. →