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June 9, 2026

The Missing Piece Between You and Every AI

Logan Yang

The AI agents in 2026 are extraordinary, but the setup around them is built to serve the companies selling it, not you.

  • Your context sits scattered across apps that refuse to share it, because the more of your data they hold, the harder it is for you to leave.
  • Every product now sells its own bolted-on assistant instead of letting your AI agent in, because a feature they own is a feature they can bill you for.
  • Your computer sits idle while you rent the same horsepower from someone else's cloud to run AI tasks, because every month of rent lands in their pocket.

The intelligence keeps getting better, and the setup around it stays rigged.

Miyo is built to unrig the setup and make it serve you instead.

It runs quietly on your machine in the background and connects the three things you already own:

  • Your data becomes context any agent can search, from a note you wrote last year to a meeting that ended an hour ago.
  • Your agent does the work instead of the inferior one bolted-on inside some app online.
  • Your hardware runs the heavy jobs, even when you ask from across town.

The pieces you already have finally work as one.

The name miyo is short for "make it your own". Here is what that looks like for each piece.

Your data

Everything you know should be portable, searchable, and within reach of every agent you choose.

Stop introducing yourself to every AI

You've likely spent months teaching ChatGPT how you think, so its answers get sharper over time. Then someone swears Claude is better, you open it up, and you're a stranger all over again, because everything ChatGPT learned about you stayed behind in ChatGPT.

It happens mid-task, too. You hit a token limit in Claude, move the work to ChatGPT, then want your Hermes agent to take over the actionable items. Before any of them can help, you're copy-pasting the whole backstory: what you're building, what you ruled out, the thing that broke this morning, the notes from the last three client calls. Each AI keeps its own memory sealed behind its own walls, and your files sit in apps they cannot search.

Miyo fixes that.

It keeps one memory of you on your own computer and makes your world searchable by any agent you permit via a secure MCP. Think Spotlight for AI: notes, transcripts, PDFs, web pages, and recordings become context your agent can reach through the miyo CLI/MCP. ChatGPT, Claude, Hermes, or whatever comes next can follow the same conversation instead of making you carry it from app to app.

You explain yourself a single time, to one memory on your own computer that every agent shares.

Stop letting apps hold your data hostage

You know the feeling if you've ever tried to leave a cloud-based app like Notion: years of notes live in their cloud, and the way out is an export that hands you a tangle of files with broken links and formats. The latest wave of AI meeting transcription apps plays the same game by intentionally keeping every transcript on their platform and making "download as a plain text file" just annoying enough that you stop doing it after every meeting. So you stay, not because these apps earned your loyalty, but because walking away costs more than putting up with it. That is not an accident. Trapped data is their business model.

Miyo does the opposite.

Everything it holds lives on your machine as plain files you and your agents can open and read, so there's nothing behind glass and nothing to export, because you've held it the whole time. If the day comes when you want to leave Miyo, you leave, and your context comes with you as plain files you can still use without any proprietary format.

Your agent

The smartest AI agents you already trust should do the work, not a weaker one bolted onto some app you find online.

Stop paying twice for weaker AI

Look at those "AI apps" on the market. The meeting app sells AI summaries for a few dollars more a month. The notes app has an in-house assistant that burns tokens on their end. The accounting app, the email client, the PDF reader, the to-do list, each one bolting on its own little AI and charging you for it. And every one of those built-in AIs is more rigid than the frontier agent you already use every day: it does the one thing its menu offers, the way its product manager decided, and nothing else.

Meanwhile, you pay for something like Claude Code or Codex, which runs circles around all of them. You'd trust it with this work in a heartbeat if only it could reach those files. Instead, every app pays for its own model calls behind the scenes, passes the bill to you, and delivers something worse than what you already have. You are funding your frontier agent plus a pile of weaker copies scattered across your tools, when the one agent you chose should be enough.

Miyo ends this nonsense.

Treat your apps as sources of raw material rather than gatekeepers of features. The meeting app's only job is to hand over the transcript, and from there your own agent takes it wherever you want: a summary in your voice, a beautiful slide deck, a dashboard for the team, the endless possibilities that no built-in button will offer. You get better work, shaped your way, without spending a cent on an inferior copy of an AI you have.

Stop doing work that should do itself

Some work shouldn't need you at all. The meeting ends, and somebody still has to pull out the action items and send them around. The weekly review rolls around, and somebody still has to gather the week's notes. That somebody is always you.

With Miyo, it doesn't have to be.

Let Miyo watch for the moments you choose and act on them. A recording lands in a folder, and by the time you're back at your desk, your bespoke slide deck and dashboard are ready, handled by your own agent. Every Friday afternoon, a digest of the week's notes shows up without anyone asking. You set it up once, in plain language, and it quietly runs on schedules and triggers from then on. It feels less like talking to a chatbot and more like the work doing itself.

Your hardware

The machine on your desk should run the heavy jobs, not a cloud you rent by the month.

Stop renting someone else's computer

There's a strange habit in how we use AI now: you own a decent or even powerful machine, and then you pay cloud services monthly to do work it could do for free. Transcribing audio, processing documents, making your files searchable. None of that needs to leave your desk.

Miyo puts your own hardware to work.

The heavy lifting runs locally, on the computer you've bought and paid for, which means transcribing a recording or digesting a stack of PDFs costs you nothing extra, and your files stay home instead of piling up in yet another service. Distance doesn't break this. You're on the train, you ask ChatGPT on your phone about the contract you saved at home yesterday, and through Miyo's relay it searches the folder on your desk and comes back with the answer before your stop. Your machine did the work, securely and with your permission. The computer on your desk is the cloud service you stop renting.

Make it your own

This is the point of Miyo: the things you already own should work for you.

Your data should be portable and searchable, not trapped in apps or reintroduced to every AI. Your agent should be the one doing the work, not a weaker assistant bolted onto every product you open. Your hardware should carry the load it is capable of carrying, instead of sitting idle while you rent someone else's computer.

Miyo brings those pieces together on your machine. Your context stays yours, your best agent can reach it, and your computer becomes the local engine behind the work.

That is what it means to make it your own.

Download miyo for free →