I came out of the oil patch — years of non-destructive testing, not software. A year back I started a small automation agency called Autafy AI Automation, mostly building n8n workflows for people, the kind of behind-the-scenes automation that quietly saves hours every week.
But I kept running into the same wall. The tools were scattered. A workflow here, an integration there, an AI model somewhere else. Even when the automation worked, the person I built it for often didn't really understand what it did, or what else was possible. They had power they couldn't see or reach.
So I wanted to build something different: one place where all the tools live together, that a normal person can actually use, where you can see what the AI agent is doing and start imagining what more you could do with it.
That became AIDA - "Autafy's Intelligence Driven Agent"
What it is
AIDA is a personal AI agent you run on your own server. You install it with one command, and manage everything from a web dashboard — no terminal, no code after setup.
Here's a 2-minute demo of it actually doing things:
Once it's running, it does the kind of work that eats your day:
- It sends me a morning briefing on Telegram before I even wake up — my calendar, the emails that actually need a reply, the weather, my tasks for the day. I roll over, check my phone, and I already know what my day looks like.
- It triages my inbox all day, flagging what's urgent based on rules I set, and can even draft the reply.
- It answers questions from my own documents — upload a PDF or a spreadsheet, ask a question, and it answers with a citation back to the source.
- It connects to the tools I already use — Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Outlook, Notion, Slack, Stripe, and more.
- And it runs on whatever AI model I want — including fully local models, so nothing has to leave my machine at all.
Who it's for
Honestly, most working professionals.
Solo entrepreneurs and freelancers who are doing the work and running the business, and don't have time to babysit their inbox. Consultants who live out of their calendar. Even students — you can drop your study materials into the knowledge base and ask the agent questions, and it answers from your own notes.
It's not built for one narrow niche. It's built for anyone who has more to do than hours in the day and wants a capable assistant that's actually theirs.
Why self-hosted, and why pay once
This is the part I care about most.
Most AI assistants run on someone else's servers. That means your email, your files, your calendar — your clients' data — all pass through a company you have to trust. I didn't want that, and I didn't think my clients should have to accept it either.
So AIDA runs on your server. Your data stays with you. The only thing that ever leaves is the call to whichever AI provider you choose and if you run a local model, not even that.
And it's a one-time price, not a subscription. You buy it once and own it for life. I'd rather have customers who feel like they own something than customers I'm billing forever.
The honest part
It took a few months to build, mostly solo. The hardest part wasn't the AI, it was the plumbing. Wiring up all those tools and integrations so they work together reliably, from one place, took far longer than I expected. Every service has its own quirks, its own auth, its own edge cases. Making it feel simple on the outside meant a lot of unglamorous work on the inside.
But that was the whole point. The value isn't any single feature, It's that everything finally lives in one place a normal person can actually use.
Try it
AIDA is live now. It installs on any small VPS with one command, there's a free trial (no credit card), and it's a one-time founding license for the first customers before the price goes up.
If you've ever wanted a capable AI assistant that runs on your own machine and keeps your data yours, I'd genuinely love for you to try it and I'm around to answer any questions.

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