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Token is most useful for the small, repetitive, or context-heavy work that eats your day. What it can actually touch depends on which tools you have set up in that chat, but here is the shape of what it does well.

Find and organize information

Search your notes and documents and pull the answer into chat, create and update pages, or summarize a long document, thread, or web page.

Manage your calendar

Check what is on your calendar and when you are free, create and move events, and flag scheduling conflicts before they happen.

Read the web

Fetch a web page and summarize it, or pull a specific fact or detail out of a link you paste.

Work across your tools

Chain steps together: look something up, act on it, then report back. It can send a message or summary to another channel when you ask.

Run things on a schedule

Token can do work on a recurring basis, like a daily summary or a reminder, without you asking each time.

Scheduled tasks

Set up standing instructions that run on their own. See how they work and how Token recovers if a tool is missing.

Where the limits are

Token only acts through the tools you set up, and sensitive actions go through approvals. It never invents access it does not have. If it cannot do something, it tells you, usually with a note about what it would need in order to help.