The bottleneck of AI Agent is when I, as an user, need to become the operator.
It should feel more like a colleague in your messages. And that gap is filling up fast.
Toyo just launched an AI executive assistant built around the interface people already use: messages.
The product lives in iMessage and Telegram, so delegation starts as a normal conversation.
People talk to Toyo in messages. Behind the scenes, Toyo handles tool access, context, and background workflows.
The shift here is that chat becomes the visible layer, not the full product.
Behind that scene, Toyo connects to email, calendar, Slack, CRM, docs, meeting notes, and project tools.
That access lets one short message trigger a workflow across the places where work already sits.
A user can ask it to watch important email, draft a reply, prepare a meeting, chase a follow-up, or send a daily briefing.
Toyo then handles the slower parts that usually make agent systems feel heavy.
It pulls context, calls tools, keeps workflow state, runs scheduled checks, and asks for approval before sensitive actions.
Most people do not want to configure agents, monitor runs, inspect failures, or maintain automation chains.
They want to delegate work, add context when needed, and review the output before anything leaves their account.
Toyo compresses that loop into messaging. It can be operated also by voice completely.
A user can send a voice note, or Toyo can call when it needs more context.
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