Open the app. Talk.
No forms, no setup wizards. Pulse listens for what you need from your day, then quietly does the rest in the background.
Talk to Pulse. Move meetings, plan focus, walk through your week — across every calendar you already use.
Calendars are visual. Your life is spoken. WakaSmart bridges the two.
Six steps. Five real people. One conversation that holds your week.
No forms, no setup wizards. Pulse listens for what you need from your day, then quietly does the rest in the background.
Google, iCloud, Outlook, Notion. Pulse stitches them into one timeline you can actually reason about.
"Move my afternoon by thirty minutes." "Find me three hours of focus this week." Pulse understands constraints, attendees, travel — and asks before it acts.
A morning brief, in your voice. Weather, travel, the one thing you cared about yesterday. No staring at a wall of blocks.
Leave-now alerts that account for the bus, the rain, and the meeting that just slipped 10 minutes. Two-tap reschedule when life moves.
Pulse notices when Wednesdays are your best ship day, when meetings cluster, when focus is leaking. Then it suggests, in a sentence.
Calendars were designed to be looked at. Modern life is something you talk through — with collaborators, with partners, with yourself. The interface that already understands "push it by thirty" should be the one that runs your day.
Calendars store events; they don't reason about them. WakaSmart holds context across your week — who you owe attention, what travel costs, where focus has to live — and offers the next move as a suggestion, never a command.
For the first time, an assistant can hold a long conversation about your day without losing the thread. We built WakaSmart so that capability lands somewhere it matters: the hours you spend, the people you keep, the focus you protect.
Six surfaces. One ongoing conversation.
Talk, push, reshape — Pulse understands constraints and asks before it acts.
Leave-now alerts that fold in transit, weather, and the meeting that just shifted.
Block real time for deep work; the day reflows around it instead of fighting back.
Google · iCloud · Outlook · Notion. One timeline, no copy-paste, no double-booking.
Where your time goes, in language. Sip it weekly. Reshape what isn't working.
On-device speech, encrypted at rest, you own your data. Always exportable.
Watch Harpreet's Tuesday evolve from morning brief to evening insight — without ever opening another tab.
Pulse reads only the calendars you connect, and you can revoke any of them at any moment. We never sell or share your data.
No. Pulse listens only when you tap the orb or say the wake phrase you choose during setup. Speech runs on-device by default.
Google Calendar, iCloud, Outlook, Microsoft 365, and Notion Calendar at launch. Fastmail and Proton are next.
Yes — Studio plans share rhythms and focus blocks across a team. Pulse respects working hours, time zones, and decline preferences automatically.
You can export everything as ICS at any time. After cancellation we delete your account within 30 days unless you ask us to keep it dormant.
Mac and Windows apps are in invite-only beta. The mobile app is the canonical surface — desktop reflects what Pulse already knows.
No. Your calendar is yours. We use anonymized usage telemetry only with explicit opt-in, and you can turn it off in Privacy & Voice.
A small team based in Lagos and Brooklyn. We were tired of fighting our calendars — so we built one we could talk to.