Dropbox acquires AI-powered calendar app Reclaim.ai

Reclaim.ai Inc., a Portland-based startup that uses artificial intelligence to coordinate schedules with its calendar app, announced Tuesday that it was acquired by file-sharing giant Dropbox Inc.

Founded in 2019, Reclaim’s calendaring tool assists with finding one of the best times for recurring routines, schedules tasks, tracks time and can even buffer breaks for travel and rest between meetings for entire teams and organizations.

Reclaim Founders Henry Shapiro and Patrick Lightbody said in an announcement on X that today the app is utilized by 320,000 users across greater than 43,000 corporations, including notable corporations comparable to PagerDuty, Zapier and GitHub.

Although Dropbox didn’t reveal the terms of the deal, the founders said that your complete team of twenty-two employees could be joining the storage giant in addition to your complete service. The founders added that they might proceed to take a position within the app and construct recent features and updates to the experience.

“We began Reclaim by specializing in the calendar because we believed — and still do — that it’s perhaps probably the most critical system that individuals, teams, and firms have for each understanding what’s being worked on and for taking motion,” the founders wrote within the announcement blog post. “We also consider that it only gets higher with increased intelligence, automation and humanity.”

The corporate had raised $9.5 million in funding to this point from investors including Calendly LLC, Index Ventures, Yummy Ventures and Gradient Ventures. Reclaim’s competitors include calendaring and scheduling automation services Calendly, Clockwise Inc. and Doodle AG.

In keeping with Shapiro and Lightbody, what drew them to Dropbox was a letter published by Chief Executive Drew Houston in 2018 that outlined his vision of a calendar that might make everyone’s life higher by organizing their day.

“Imagine attending to work within the morning to seek out your calendar reorganized so you’ve gotten a three-hour block of time to truly focus,” Houston said. “Imagine starting your day and seeing the right to-do list — one based on a deep understanding of your priorities and your team’s priorities.”

Today, the founders of Reclaim said, the emergence and popular adoption of generative AI makes it possible to embrace this type of tooling. By joining forces with Dropbox, users will get a calendar that not only understands what other individuals are doing but additionally what they’re involved with. The ability of generative AI makes it possible so that you can just say what you wish and may handle all of the underlying work of scheduling for you.

Requiem currently works only with Google Calendar, however the team says that a key priority is bringing support for Microsoft Corp.’s Outlook on board in the subsequent few months for all users. The corporate also said it’s working towards introducing an AI copilot named Reclaim Assistant.

Image: Pixabay

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