About folk
folk is an AI assistant that lives inside common messaging apps like iMessage, Telegram, and Discord, so it can join conversations where you already are. It offers persistent memory, can join meetings to take notes, and acts on contextual signals such as location or calendar events to help with everyday tasks.
Review
folk aims to be a personal assistant that grows more useful the more you interact with it, combining chat-based workflows with background monitoring and automation. Its approach centers on a structured memory model and in-chat actions, which makes it feel more like an ongoing collaborator than a single-use bot.
Key Features
- In-chat assistant across multiple messaging platforms (iMessage, Telegram, Discord, etc.).
- Persistent memory implemented as a structured knowledge graph that stores durable facts and relevant context tied to your account.
- Meeting notetaker that can join Google Meet sessions, transcribe conversations, and surface follow-ups.
- Location- and event-aware proactivity (for example, reminders when you pass a place on a list) and condition-based watchers.
- Multiplayer capabilities and integrations: multiple users' assistants can coordinate tasks and connect to external services or custom skills.
Pricing and Value
folk offers free options and launched with a promotional discount (15% off with the code FOLK). The likely pricing model is a freemium tier plus paid plans for advanced features such as extended memory, more integrations, or higher usage limits. For users who live in messaging apps and want automated context-aware assistance, folk can save time on coordination, meeting notes, and routine errands; that value scales if you rely on those workflows daily or use the multiplayer features with friends or teammates.
Pros
- Works inside the messaging apps you already use, which reduces friction and context switching.
- Structured memory approach keeps useful facts accessible without re-prompting every session.
- Proactive behavior tied to real signals (location, calendar, integrations) can surface timely actions and reminders.
- Multiplayer and integration support makes group coordination-booking, sharing, or delegating-more straightforward.
Cons
- Privacy and data-storage details matter: users should confirm how memories are stored, who can access them, and what controls exist for deletion or export.
- Some features are early-stage and may require refinement or broader integration coverage to meet diverse user needs.
- Requires permissions such as location, meeting access, and access to message threads, which may be a blocker for privacy-sensitive users.
Overall, folk is best for people who spend a lot of time in messaging apps and want an assistant that remembers context and can act proactively-especially useful for social planning, basic personal admin, and meeting capture. Privacy-conscious users and those who prefer minimal permissions should review the memory and integration settings before committing to heavy use.
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