NEW from @awscloud at #WhatsNextWithAWS: Amazon Quick just dropped its BIGGEST update since launch. 💻 Quick is now a personalized app on your desktop 🤖 Proactive AI that works in the background, surfacing what you need before you even ask ✅ Create live dashboards, apps, polished presentations, and engaging images In other words: one AI platform that remembers you, builds for you, and connects to everything you already use.
Amazon Quick Launches Proactive Desktop Agent to Automate Workplace Context
· Updated
Amazon Quick launched a dedicated desktop application for macOS and Windows that introduces proactive background capabilities. The app monitors active workflows to surface relevant context—such as Slack threads or local files—before meetings begin. It uses a personal knowledge graph to maintain long-term memory across every session.
- Availability
- macOS and Windows desktop apps
- Signup requirement
- Email address only
- Native integrations
- Google Workspace, Zoom, Airtable, and more
- Creation capabilities
- Dashboards, apps, presentations, images
- Memory architecture
- Personal knowledge graph
This shift mirrors a broader industry move toward proactive desktop agents that operate directly on hardware to bypass the context limitations of browser-based tools. By grounding responses in local data, Amazon is competing with autonomous digital workers that aim to solve information fragmentation.
You can now generate live dashboards, intelligent apps, and polished presentations directly from the chat interface using natural language. The update includes native integrations for Google Workspace, Zoom, and Airtable. Anyone can sign up with an email address; an AWS account is no longer required to access the assistant.
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View on XStill wondering? A few quick answers below.
Amazon Quick is an AI assistant for work designed to unify context across fragmented tools like email, Slack, and local files. It functions as a proactive digital worker that learns your specific workflows and project relationships to help you complete tasks like drafting notes, analyzing data, and managing your schedule more effectively.
The desktop application runs in the background on macOS or Windows, monitoring your activity across local files and workplace apps. It builds a personal knowledge graph—a system that maps relationships between your data and contacts—to understand your preferences. This allows it to proactively surface relevant information, such as briefing notes, before you ask.
No, you do not need an AWS account to get started with Amazon Quick. Users can create an account in minutes using just an email address. This lower barrier to entry is designed to make the AI assistant accessible to anyone, regardless of whether their organization already uses Amazon Web Services infrastructure.
Amazon Quick features native integrations with a wide range of workplace tools, including Google Workspace, Zoom, Microsoft 365, Salesforce, and Slack. It also connects to developer tools like Claude Code and Kiro CLI. New extensions in preview bring the assistant directly into Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint to surface insights and draft content.
Yes, Amazon Quick includes a preview feature that allows users to create intelligent apps and dashboards using natural language. You can describe what you need, and the assistant will connect to live data to build a functional interface without any coding. It can also generate polished presentations, infographics, and images directly from the chat interface.




