The workflow, in plain English
Before: 50 emails. Open each one. Decide. Act. Repeat. Your morning inbox ritual takes 30 minutes of pure decision fatigue.
After: Every email in your inbox has a colored badge: red for “needs reply today,” blue for “FYI,” gray for “newsletter.” At the top, a batch action bar: “Archive all 12 newsletters?” “Star the 3 urgent ones?” Click. Your inbox reorganized itself. The email client gained a feature its developers never built.
Why traditional tools can’t: Gmail filters use rigid rules (by sender, by keyword). Dassi reads content semantically — it knows an email from your boss about a deadline is urgent even if it doesn’t contain the word “urgent.”
Step-by-step
- Open your inbox in Gmail or Outlook Web.
- Ask dassi to label emails and propose batch actions.
- Approve safe actions (archive, label) first.
- Handle the remaining high-priority threads with suggested replies.
Example prompts to try
- “Classify this inbox: needs reply today vs FYI vs newsletters.”
- “Archive all newsletters and keep anything from my boss.”
- “Draft quick replies for the top 3 urgent threads.”
Tips for better results
- Be specific about what you want injected into the page (buttons, filters, a panel, a summary, etc.).
- If the page has multiple sections, tell dassi exactly what to focus on (e.g., “the transactions table” or “the diff for file X”).
- Prefer safe workflows first: draft, summarize, label, and prepare — then take actions (submit, purchase) only after review.