Launched this week
Muse is a personal AI assistant that feels less like software and more like a real assistant who knows how you work. It remembers your context, preferences, projects, people, boundaries, and past feedback, connects to the tools where your work lives, and turns messy inputs into polished deliverables. Instead of starting from scratch every time, Muse carries the relationship forward — asking what’s missing, following through, and helping real work move faster with less effort.










Hi Product Hunt community 👋
I’m a product maker working on Muse, mainly focusing on product experience and how Muse can support people in their day-to-day work.
One thing I really appreciate about Product Hunt is that people here don’t just look at what a product claims to do — they ask whether it is actually useful in real situations.
That’s also the lens I use when thinking about Muse. For me, the key question is not only “Can AI give me a good answer?” but “Can AI help me organize scattered context and produce something concrete, like a research brief, a launch plan, or a clear summary?”
Muse is being built around that idea: understanding context, working with connected tools, adapting to personal working styles, and producing real deliverables.
I’d love to hear which work tasks you would want Muse to support first — research, planning, summarizing, writing, or something else that current AI tools still make difficult.
The persona feature looks so interesting! Most agent-style products focus on productivity but often overlook personalization (or memory—I haven't played with yours enough yet to judge lol). If you guys can actually balance these two well, that'd be pretty awesome!
@elon_z_0308 Totally agree — productivity without personalization usually turns into another generic assistant.
For us, persona + memory is the core piece. Muse should understand how u work, what u care about, how u like things communicated, and what context actually matters — then use that to help u get work done in a way that feels personal, not robotic.
Balancing usefulness with user control is the hard part tho. We don’t want personalization to feel creepy or messy, so we’re being pretty careful with what gets remembered and how users can edit or delete it.
Muse Made Me Delete Every Other AI Coworker
Disclaimer: this is not a paid post. Nobody sent me a unit. No one PR'd me.I just used it for a week and I'm physically unable to shut up about it — and the target of my yelling isn't Muse, it'sthe twenty other AI coworkers I've used over the past two years.
They all share the same disease. I say "I'm a bit cold" and the thing immediately puts my coat on, closes the window, and pours me a hot drink. This is what I call"pick-me" AI energy— desperately trying to prove it's useful, terrified you'll close the tab.
Muse doesn't do that.
Thing one: it has the audacity to not listen to me.I asked it to clean up an interview transcript. It didn't quietly rewrite my phrasing. I asked for an email draft. It didn't "optimize" my tone behind my back. I thought it was broken. Then I dug into its settings and realized —restraint is the factory default, not a feature bolted on later.In 2026, when AI tools collectively suffer fromyes-man syndrome, this is straight-upgaslighting the entire industry into thinking AI has to be this eager to please.
Thing two: it remembers but it shuts up about it.I used it for a full week. Not once did it pop up and say "by the way, you said this three weeks ago~". Then one day I casually mentioned a project from three months ago — and it just picked right up.Real ones don't need to remind you they're paying attention.That hit different.
Thing three: it has the guts to leave the UI empty.The whole interface looks like a regular note-taking app. No chat panel on the left. No plugin drawer on the right. No floating orb at the bottom. When you open something called an "AI coworker" and see nothing but a minimalist input box —it gives me "calm down, I'm not that kind of app" vibes.In an era when every AI tool wants to be"your everything app,"this is genuinely the rarest energy out there.
The moment that wrecked me was last Friday. Working late, I typed: "Do you still remember that thing I said I wanted to do last month?" It didn't pull up a timeline. Didn't throw a link at me. Didn't reply with"Great question! Let me help you with that..."in that fake-polite customer-service voice. Just a short paragraph —in almost exactly the way I'd said it back then.
I stared at that paragraph for a long time. Honestly, as someone who's pretty much numb to AI tools at this point, what wrecked me wasn't what Muse can do. It made me believe one small thing again:all those scattered things I said out loud were actually being heard— even if what heard them was an AI.
Go to museai.im. Try it yourself. You're welcome.And again —no one paid me for this.If they had, the post would be way worse.
MuseAI is live on ProductHunt today.
As the technical lead, what excites me most is not building “another AI chat tool,” but exploring a new form of personal intelligence — one that can understand long-term goals, remember what matters, stay aware of context, and help people turn intent into action.
Over the past few months, we’ve been focused on several hard problems:
How can AI remember only what truly matters?
How can it maintain continuity across tasks and conversations?
How can tool use, content generation, and task execution become a reliable system instead of a one-off demo?
MuseAI is still early, but today is an important milestone.
Grateful to our team, early users, and everyone who has supported us along the way.
If this direction resonates with you, we’d love your feedback and support on ProductHunt.
@zeus_wusir I like the idea of treating an AI as a long-term assistant instead of starting every conversation from scratch. That’s probably the biggest frustration with most AI tools today.
One thing I’m wondering about is how Muse decides what context is still relevant after weeks or months of usage. People’s priorities, projects and working styles change over time. How do you prevent old context from becoming noise without forcing users to constantly clean up or reset their memory?
Hi everyone, I’m the backend lead for Muse AI, and I’m excited to introduce the product we’ve just launched.
Muse is a new kind of AI assistant. It’s simple, fast, and easy to use — and more importantly, it has long-term memory. Muse can understand your habits, remember your needs, and help you efficiently summarize, organize, and make sense of information.
Our goal is for Muse to become the most natural and reliable intelligent assistant by everyone’s side.
In MUSE, we designed 30 AI assistants with different personalities, looks, and working styles.
The reason is simple: a real assistant should not feel the same for everyone.
Your work habits are different. Your assistant should be different too.