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Kiki is an operating system run by an AI agent. Instead of opening apps and clicking through menus, you tell your computer what you want — and it does it. This page is the quickest way to understand Kiki and get going.

What you actually do with Kiki

You describe a goal. Kiki figures out the steps, uses the right tools, and carries it out — while you watch, approve as it goes, or let it run on its own.

"Summarize the PDFs in my downloads." · "Reply to these three emails in my usual tone." · "Keep an eye on the build and tell me when it's done."

You stay in control the whole time, and by default everything happens on your own device — no data leaves unless you send it.

The complete experience

Kiki has three parts. You can use just the first, or all of them together.

  • The OS does the work, on your hardware, privately. It's free and open source.
  • The cloud (optional) lets you watch your devices, get updates over the air, sync your data, and browse the app store.
  • The mobile app lets you check on a task and take over from your phone.

Your path from here

  1. Download Kiki — pick the build for your device, or try it in a VM.
  2. Install it — write it to a USB stick or boot it in a virtual machine.
  3. Your first run — set up, then start your first task.

Once you're up and running, Using Kiki covers everyday use: working in sessions, the desktop, voice, apps, and your data.

No account required

You don't need an account or the cloud to use Kiki. Install the OS and you're ready. Add the cloud later if you want to manage devices remotely.

Kiki OS, Desktop & SDK are open source. See Licensing.