Launching today

AI Emaily
Your AI inbox that writes like you + replies on autopilot
199 followers
Your AI inbox that writes like you + replies on autopilot
199 followers
AI Emaily is the AI-native inbox that runs like your chief of staff. It reads every message, triages what actually needs you, and quiets the noise. It drafts replies in your own voice — not generic AI text — then schedules and sends across Gmail, Outlook, and any provider from one inbox. Three modes: Manual, Copilot, Autopilot. You approve, it acts, with undo and a full audit trail on everything. Your mail is never used to train models. Start free.













Autopilot email sending is the boldest part of this. Once the agent can send from someone's real address, one wrong call lands in a customer's inbox with their name on it. Is there a scope on what autopilot may do on its own, like never emailing new contacts or anything with money in it, or is the undo window doing all the safety work?
AI Emaily
@vollos Agreed it's the boldest part — so it's not running on vibes. Autopilot acts on what you configure: your ruleset (which lanes it may touch), your personal context and set voice, your filters, and the client profile for whoever you're replying to. You can even connect multiple email accounts, each with its own context, client profiles, and variables — so it behaves differently for your team address vs. a client one.
On top of that config sits the safety layer: an action allowlist caps what it can do (exclude new contacts, anything money-related, whatever you want kept manual), an optional send delay gives you a window, and undo + a full audit trail cover the rest. Recommended path is to run a lane in Copilot first, then promote it to Autopilot once it's proven. The boundaries are entirely yours to set.
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases
@pronafiul That's the answer I was hoping for. An allowlist that keeps new contacts and money-related actions manual is exactly where the line belongs, and running a lane in copilot before promoting it is a sane way to earn the trust rather than assume it. Good luck with the rest of launch day.
How does it actually learn my voice well enough that the drafts feel like me and not a polished assistant version of me, especially in the first few weeks?
AI Emaily
@lhan1471284 That "polished-assistant version of me" trap is exactly what we avoided — and there's no rough first-few-weeks either. Your voice comes from the Context brain you set up front (your real details, tone, quirks, optional client profiles), not a model slowly sanding you into a generic assistant. So drafts read like you from day one, and every edit just sharpens it. You control what it knows and how it sounds.
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases
Curious how "drafts in your own voice" actually works at the start — do I need to feed it a bunch of past emails, or does it figure that out from a few samples?
AI Emaily
@kayra599269 Neither — no bunch of past emails, no sample-hunting. At the start you set your tone directly in the Context brain (plus optional client profiles for specifics), so it's on-voice from the very first draft instead of guessing from data. Set once, refine with the odd edit — you're always in control of what it knows.
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases
finally tried this and the voice matching is actually uncanny, drafts sound like me not like a robot wrote them. love that i can flip between copilot and autopilot depending on the day.
AI Emaily
@enesercikyv40 This is the exact reaction we were hoping for 🙌 "Sounds like me, not a robot" is the whole bar — glad the Personal Context tuning is landing. And yeah, flipping Copilot/Autopilot by the day is how I run mine too: Copilot on the busy days, Autopilot when I want it fully handled. Thanks for giving it a real go — anything that'd make it even better for you, I'm right here.
finally something that doesn't sound like a robot wrote my replies — the voice learning actually picked up on my usual signoffs after a day. love the undo button too, saved me once already.
AI Emaily
@nesrinaybalpzj This is exactly the bar — sound like you, not a robot 🙌 That on-voice feel comes from the Context brain you set, and undo is there for exactly that reason: nothing's ever irreversible. Thanks for the real run, Nesrin — love that it already saved you once.
Drafting replies in my own voice is the part that sold me, it actually sounds like me and not the usual stiff AI tone. The undo button on autopilot mode gave me enough trust to let it run on a busy Monday.
AI Emaily
@sadkz3gy This is the whole thesis 🙌 Sounds like you, not stiff AI — because the voice comes from the Context brain you control, not a one-size template. And yeah, undo + full audit are what make Autopilot trustworthy enough to just let it run on a busy Monday. Thanks for the real run, Sadık — anything that'd make it even better, I'm right here. Check our use cases here: → aiemaily.com/use-cases
The triage is genuinely good, it caught a vendor thread I'd been ignoring without flagging it as urgent. Autopilot sending on my behalf still feels weird but the undo and audit trail take the edge off.
AI Emaily
@birolcanglvkrg Love that the triage caught the vendor thread — that's exactly the "quietly flag what I'd have missed" job 🙌 And honestly, Autopilot feeling a little weird at first is healthy — we designed for that. You're never forced into it: most people live in Copilot (drafts wait for your click) and only hand specific, low-stakes lanes to Autopilot once they trust it — scoped by your Rules and guardrails, every send logged, undo on standby. Ease in as far as you're comfortable and no further. Thanks for the real, honest run, Birol.
Check our use cases: aiemaily.com/use-cases