Littlebird raises $11M for its AI-assisted ‘recall’ tool that reads your computer screen
There has been a lot of talk around building context for AI systems. In consumer software, we have seen startups being built around search, documents, and meetings.
Some tools went further. For instance, Rewind (which became Limitless and sold to Meta) and Microsoft Recall aim to capture everything happening on your screen and help you remember it all.
A new startup called Littlebird is trying a similar thing with a slightly different approach.
While apps like Rewind store screenshots or some kind of visual data, Littlebird is “reading” the screen and storing the context in text format.
When you set up Littlebird on your computer, you can customize which apps you want the app to ignore and not capture any context. The startup said that it automatically ignores password managers and sensitive fields in web forms like passwords and credit card details. You can opt to connect other apps like Gmail, Google Calendar, Apple Calendar, and Reminders with the app, as well.
Littlebird also has an in-built Granola-like notetaker that uses system audio and runs in the background to capture transcription from meetings and create notes and action items based on that. When you open a meeting in the detailed view, there’s an option called “Prep for meeting” that takes the context of past meetings, emails, and company history into account to give you more details about the meeting. The feature also fetches information from sources like Reddit to inform you what users are thinking about a particular product or a company. Another tool called Routines offers detailed prompts for Littlebird to run at a repeated interval, such as daily, weekly, or monthly. The company lists some ready-to-use routines like daily briefing, weekly activity summary, and yesterday’s work summary. Users can create their own routines as well with custom instructions.
Littlebird was founded by Alap Shah, Naman Shah, and Alexander Green in 2024.
They previously also co-founded a health-food company called Thistle.
Green has built various companies in hardware, software, and AI.
Models don’t know anything about you, and that limits their utility.
“We don’t store any visual information.
We only store text, which makes the data a lot lighter-weight.
I also think it’s more invasive,” he said. Littlebird is free to download and use, but to get more usage limits and access to features like image generation, users can pay for plans starting from $20 per month.
Several of these investors are regular users of the product.
Rajaram, who has worked at Google and Facebook on ad products, said that the product removes the friction of remembering, retrieving, and re-explaining your own work. DocSend co-founder and CEO Heddleston said that he rewrote the company’s marketing site using the tool, using context from meetings, email, Notion, and more.
He said he asks the tool about improving his productivity workflows and being happier.
He said that for long-term success, the product will need to find a killer use case.
“I think it’s all about finding that killer must-have use case. That’s all that matters to this product’s success right now.
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