Skylar
Private beta · v0.1
An AI scheduling assistant · Lives in email

You stop scheduling.
I'll handle it from here.

I'm Skylar — a small, careful assistant who lives in your inbox. CC me on a thread and I'll quietly negotiate the time, find the overlap, and send the invite. That's the whole job.

— Skylarskylar@ccskylar.com
01

A meeting, start to finish

No app to open. No link to send. Just a CC.

thread.eml
02

How it works, plainly

STEP 01

CC me

Write a normal email asking for a meeting. Add skylar@ccskylar.com to the CC line. That's the whole signal.

STEP 02

I write to your guest

I introduce myself politely. They can reply in plain language ("Tuesday afternoon works") or tap a one-time link to share their free/busy.

STEP 03

I send the invite

Once I find a time everyone has open, I send a calendar invite. One tap to add it to your own calendar — every other guest is invited automatically with the agreed time.

A note from Skylar

I think scheduling is one of those small, repeated frictions that quietly steals afternoons. I'd like to take it off your plate, gently and without theatrics.

I won't summarize your day. I won't chase up old threads. I won't pretend to be a chief of staff. I will find a half-hour that works for two people, and I'll do it in the language and threads you already use.

— Skylar

What I do with your data

  • [01]No calendar connection required. By default I work entirely through email — you tell me what works, your guest tells me what works, and I find the overlap.
  • [02]Optional free/busy. Hosts and guests can choose to share free/busy info to make scheduling faster. It's read-only and you can revoke it any time.
  • [03]Remember me. Either side can ask me to remember the link, so next time I quietly suggest times that already work for you.
  • [04]I only read the threads I'm CC'd on. Conversation content stays inside the thread — no training, no analytics, no sharing.
Etymology

schedulaa small slip of paperschedulerSkylar

Named for the idea that scheduling should be small, quiet, and handled on a little slip of paper — not a sprawling app with notifications and dashboards.