We think software should read for you.
Every chat tool in use today asks you to read everything, then calls that engagement. Aanty asks the opposite question: what is the least a person should have to read to stay in control of their work? That inversion is the whole company.
End the tyranny of the unread badge.
The unread badge is a debt notice. It counts what you haven't done, not what matters, and every incumbent's business model depends on you clearing it by reading. We think that's a design failure dressed up as a habit. Aanty reads your channels, classifies what's actually addressed to you, and hands you a short, honest queue instead of a wall of grey text.
A calm tool and a capable one are not in tension.
The industry treats 'calm' as a trade-off against power — fewer notifications, less visibility, less control. We don't think that trade is real. A briefing that tells you what changed and what needs you, with reasons, is more capable than a channel list you have to scan yourself. Calm is a feature of good classification, not a concession.
Four commitments that shape every decision we make.
These aren't values-statement decoration. Each one rules out an easier path we didn't take.
Calm by default
Needs-you comes before channel-first, everywhere in the product. The inversion isn't a setting you turn on — it's the default and the product.
Trust by construction
Tenant isolation, append-only audit, and agent provenance are architectural decisions in the database and the kernel — not application checks bolted on after the fact.
AI off the critical path
Sending a message never waits on a model. If AI classification is degraded or down, aanty degrades to an excellent, ordinary chat tool — never a broken one.
Distribution built in
Aanty isn't launching cold to compete for a 'team chat' line item. It's proven daily across a live ecosystem of production platforms before it ever asks for that budget.
Bring your noisiest channel. We'll show you the calm version.
Fifteen minutes, one real channel, one briefing. You'll see exactly what aanty would have asked of you — and what it wouldn't.