WORLD'S FIRST AIOS TO KILL BORING WORK. The Intelligent Sidekick that gives you too much power. Claim yours.
Artificially Intelligent Operating System (AIOS)
WORLD'S FIRST AIOS TO KILL BORING WORK. The Intelligent Sidekick that gives you too much power. Claim yours.
Antispace is the World’s First Artificially Intelligent Operating System. Gamified workspace that connects all your digital tools [Gmail, Calendar, Notes, Todo and many more] into a single HUD eliminating context switching , where you and your AI sidekick control and automate all your boring work . Today we're so excited to launch the long requested feature Advanced Character Creation Mechanism . Giving you all the freedom to escape the ideologies other LLM's are stuck in. You can now create com
As a creative professional, Antispace feels like the perfect fit. From organizing to creating, the gamified experience is genuinely refreshing. As a sci-fi fan, I instantly loved the command center vibe - such a clever and well-executed idea. Congrats on the launch!
An AI sidekick to kill boring tasks? Sign me up! Though 'too much power' sounds slightly terrifying... in a fun way.
Damn what a beautiful product man !!! So jealous and happy at the same time. Love it
Thanks for making this. The central hub is a good concept, and I can see the potential. Have you considered: Ability to connect my paid AI accounts to this so I'm not rate-limited, Have another font option so it's easier to read - the light grey on white is tricky, as are the current font options on black. Connecting to Zapier, Asana, Trello, Slack, etc., would be the killer. This will be the killer AIOS for focus. Keep going - this is brilliant! Take my money...
A measure of community engagement at launch. Higher means more people noticed and interacted with the product. It's a traction signal, not a quality rating.
Discussion threads divided by interest score. Above 0.30 is strong. Below 0.15 suggests the product got clicks but not conversation.
Categories come from the product's launch tags. Most products appear in 2-3 categories. The primary category is listed first.
The scores reflect launch-period engagement. Historical data is preserved and doesn't change retroactively. The build date at the bottom shows when the index was last refreshed.