Faraday is the world's only promptlessly intelligent, highly organized, and contextually aware email client that auto-processes, classifies, extracts and re-presents each of your emails to the best of their utility, drastically reducing cognitive load, saving significant time, while staying out of your way. Securely, encryptedly, beautifully.
From its incomparable email organisation and thread resolution abilities to its dual-store architecture, Faraday was built with truly innovative, patent-pending technologies that we developed ourselves. For the first time in the world.
It replaces the archaic, undifferentiated table of emails in our kitchen-sink like inboxes, using a refreshing and clever orchestration of processes, delivering a remarkable experience.
Not a mere auto-drafter or a compose plugin, but an entirely superior email client.
My story started with email itself. I was steered by my own annoyances with it, since my consulting days. The fact that it remains unorganized, cluttered, and fatiguing even today, became unacceptable. Even the "modern" clients today simply put our emails in a table, support a few keyboard shortcuts, a few simple features, and are done. The newer ones provide AI-based compose assist, and the newest ones now want us to prompt for each email. Chat for everything. Ugh! There is still no higher order classification, no deeper grouping. Every email — a project update, a transaction, a human message — appears the same. Key attachments are always elusive when needed. Trivial auto-updates crowd us, and long forwarded threads are still painful to follow with the untidy nature of their chaining. We therefore set out to build Faraday with 3 principles: First, user centricity is paramount, above all else. Second, there needs to be a fundamental entrenchment with AI. No mere gimmicks. And third, develop with first principles. Not borrowing from what has already been, but what can be. At each step. The result: A refreshingly original client incomparable to any other. Remarkably organised, promptlessly intelligent and visually striking✨ We essentially built Faraday with a lot of love and critical thinking🙂 So go ahead, sign in at https://faraday.email, and let us know all your thoughts and experiences!
In the world of Cookie Clicker https://cookieclicker76.io, you'll go from a humble baker to the owner of a multiverse empire, hiring grandmothers to bake and building global cookie factories.
Really interesting direction. The “promptless” approach to email organization is compelling, especially for people dealing with high daily inbox volume across multiple accounts. The thread cleanup and attachment handling features look particularly practical. One thing that could make the value clearer: add a few concrete before/after examples (raw inbox vs. Faraday view) so users can quickly understand how much cognitive load it removes in real workflows.
The attachment renaming feature is one of those small details that shows someone actually uses email heavily. I lose so much time hunting through downloads full of "IMG_4392.pdf" and "Document(3).docx" trying to find the right file. Curious about the thread resolution — does it handle cases where someone replies to an old thread with a completely new topic? That's always been the messiest part of email for me, where the subject says one thing but the conversation forked three topics ago.
This framing of reducing cognitive load rather than just “improving email productivity” really stands out. Most AI email tools focus on drafting or summarizing, but restructuring the inbox itself — especially with context-aware classification and re-presentation — feels like a deeper systems-level approach. I’m particularly curious about how “promptless intelligence” works in practice. How do you balance automation with user control, especially for edge cases where context is ambiguous? Also, do you see this replacing traditional inbox paradigms entirely, or layering on top as a smarter abstraction? Feels like you're not just building a tool, but redefining how people interact with email.
The thread reconstruction feature is what stands out most — hierarchically resolving forwarded chains and eliminating recursive repetition is something every email client has ignored for decades. The dual-store architecture and quantum-resistant encryption also show this was built with genuine technical depth, not just an AI wrapper on top of Gmail. One question: how does Faraday handle accounts that mix personal and work emails heavily — does the classification stay clean across very different email styles in the same inbox?
The dual-store architecture and patent-pending contextual awareness in Faraday is a real differentiator. Most email clients just display messages — Faraday actually understands them. The thread resolution and auto-classification features sound incredibly powerful for busy professionals. Really curious to see how it handles complex multi-party threads!
Really nice approach to email design. Most email clients haven't changed their UI philosophy in over a decade — everything still looks like Gmail circa 2015. The focus on visual tidiness is something I didn't know I wanted until I saw it. Curious about the smart features — does it do any AI-powered email categorization or priority sorting? That would be the killer combo with the clean interface.
From the product demo, I really love the functionality of seeing Offers & Promotions as what they actually are: advertising. Changing them into complex ad cards and presenting the offers is actually doing a lot of extra work for the advertisers themselves. Honestly, if I was a major brand, I'd be lobbying to get every email program to do exactly what you did and paying them extra to do it.
Email clients have been stuck in the same UX paradigm for over a decade. The fact that you are prioritizing design quality alongside functionality is refreshing — most email tools optimize for power users and end up looking like control panels. The real test will be how it handles high-volume inboxes with mixed personal and work email. If the triage and categorization are genuinely smart, this could replace tools that people only tolerate because there is no better alternative. Rooting for this one.
The "tidiest email client ever built" claim is doing a lot of work, but the UI screenshots back it up. The big bet here is whether people will switch away from Gmail/Outlook clients for aesthetics — the switching cost is high but the audience who values design-first tools is real and underserved. The AI-assisted prioritization is where this wins if it actually reduces inbox anxiety rather than just reorganizing it. Curious whether the AI learns user-specific behavior or applies generic heuristics.
The star feature is its context-aware intelligent classification: no manual rules needed. The AI automatically sorts every email into clear categories (work, subscriptions, ads, personal) and pulls out key details instantly — verification codes, meeting times, action items — right at your fingertips.
My story started with email itself. I was steered by my own annoyances with it, since my consulting days. The fact that it remains unorganized, cluttered, and fatiguing even today, became unacceptable. Even the "modern" clients today simply put our emails in a table, support a few keyboard shortcuts, a few simple features, and are done. The newer ones provide AI-based compose assist, and the newest ones now want us to prompt for each email. Chat for everything. Ugh! There is still no higher order classification, no deeper grouping. Every email — a project update, a transaction, a human message — appears the same. Key attachments are always elusive when needed. Trivial auto-updates crowd us, and long forwarded threads are still painful to follow with the untidy nature of their chaining. We therefore set out to build Faraday with 3 principles: First, user centricity is paramount, above all else. Second, there needs to be a fundamental entrenchment with AI. No mere gimmicks. And third, develop with first principles. Not borrowing from what has already been, but what can be. At each step. The result: A refreshingly original client incomparable to any other. Remarkably organised, promptlessly intelligent and visually striking✨ We essentially built Faraday with a lot of love and critical thinking🙂 So go ahead, sign in at https://faraday.email, and let us know all your thoughts and experiences!
In the world of Cookie Clicker https://cookieclicker76.io, you'll go from a humble baker to the owner of a multiverse empire, hiring grandmothers to bake and building global cookie factories.
Really interesting direction. The “promptless” approach to email organization is compelling, especially for people dealing with high daily inbox volume across multiple accounts. The thread cleanup and attachment handling features look particularly practical. One thing that could make the value clearer: add a few concrete before/after examples (raw inbox vs. Faraday view) so users can quickly understand how much cognitive load it removes in real workflows.
The attachment renaming feature is one of those small details that shows someone actually uses email heavily. I lose so much time hunting through downloads full of "IMG_4392.pdf" and "Document(3).docx" trying to find the right file. Curious about the thread resolution — does it handle cases where someone replies to an old thread with a completely new topic? That's always been the messiest part of email for me, where the subject says one thing but the conversation forked three topics ago.
This framing of reducing cognitive load rather than just “improving email productivity” really stands out. Most AI email tools focus on drafting or summarizing, but restructuring the inbox itself — especially with context-aware classification and re-presentation — feels like a deeper systems-level approach. I’m particularly curious about how “promptless intelligence” works in practice. How do you balance automation with user control, especially for edge cases where context is ambiguous? Also, do you see this replacing traditional inbox paradigms entirely, or layering on top as a smarter abstraction? Feels like you're not just building a tool, but redefining how people interact with email.
The thread reconstruction feature is what stands out most — hierarchically resolving forwarded chains and eliminating recursive repetition is something every email client has ignored for decades. The dual-store architecture and quantum-resistant encryption also show this was built with genuine technical depth, not just an AI wrapper on top of Gmail. One question: how does Faraday handle accounts that mix personal and work emails heavily — does the classification stay clean across very different email styles in the same inbox?
The dual-store architecture and patent-pending contextual awareness in Faraday is a real differentiator. Most email clients just display messages — Faraday actually understands them. The thread resolution and auto-classification features sound incredibly powerful for busy professionals. Really curious to see how it handles complex multi-party threads!
Really nice approach to email design. Most email clients haven't changed their UI philosophy in over a decade — everything still looks like Gmail circa 2015. The focus on visual tidiness is something I didn't know I wanted until I saw it. Curious about the smart features — does it do any AI-powered email categorization or priority sorting? That would be the killer combo with the clean interface.
From the product demo, I really love the functionality of seeing Offers & Promotions as what they actually are: advertising. Changing them into complex ad cards and presenting the offers is actually doing a lot of extra work for the advertisers themselves. Honestly, if I was a major brand, I'd be lobbying to get every email program to do exactly what you did and paying them extra to do it.
Email clients have been stuck in the same UX paradigm for over a decade. The fact that you are prioritizing design quality alongside functionality is refreshing — most email tools optimize for power users and end up looking like control panels. The real test will be how it handles high-volume inboxes with mixed personal and work email. If the triage and categorization are genuinely smart, this could replace tools that people only tolerate because there is no better alternative. Rooting for this one.
The "tidiest email client ever built" claim is doing a lot of work, but the UI screenshots back it up. The big bet here is whether people will switch away from Gmail/Outlook clients for aesthetics — the switching cost is high but the audience who values design-first tools is real and underserved. The AI-assisted prioritization is where this wins if it actually reduces inbox anxiety rather than just reorganizing it. Curious whether the AI learns user-specific behavior or applies generic heuristics.
The star feature is its context-aware intelligent classification: no manual rules needed. The AI automatically sorts every email into clear categories (work, subscriptions, ads, personal) and pulls out key details instantly — verification codes, meeting times, action items — right at your fingertips.
Find your next favorite product or submit your own. Made by @FalakDigital.
Copyright ©2025. All Rights Reserved