The Kijulo Blog
Deep dives on the ideas behind Kijulo — the everyday problems they solve, real-world use cases, and exactly how to put them to work in the app.
Fewer tokens, better answers: focus the agent instead of overloading it
Everything you leave switched on is re-sent to the model every turn — and a bloated context is both more expensive and less accurate. Launchers, Personas, Tool sets, Skills, and tight scope let you send less and get more.
You don't have to be a coder to use a terminal — you have to watch one.
Kijulo gives the agent a real terminal so it can actually do things — install, run, convert, automate. The difference: you see every command in plain sight, can grab the keyboard yourself, and hand results back with one click. Here is why even non-coders should open it.
Your files need a permanent address. That's what a UID is for.
A quarter of the web's links are already dead, and filenames rot the same way — rename a note and every link to it breaks. A UID pins a stable identity to each file. Here's why that matters and how Kijulo generates them.
Your work is spread across 900 apps. Point one agent at all of them.
The average enterprise runs on hundreds of apps and only a fraction talk to each other. MCP servers and integrations let your Kijulo agent reach past its own walls into the rest of your stack.
Letting AI touch your files — safely
Autonomous agents are only useful if you can trust them. How Kijulo puts you in charge of every folder and every tool the assistant can reach.
From a good conversation to a workflow that runs itself
Knowledge workers lose about a day a week to repetitive busywork. Turn a chat that worked once into a workflow you can run over every row, every file, on a schedule.
Stop copy-pasting into chatbots: give your AI real context
Most AI mistakes are context problems, not intelligence problems. Why grounding the assistant in your own data beats pasting snippets into a generic chatbot.
Your data lives in ten apps. Here is how to get it back.
The average knowledge worker loses nearly two hours a day just hunting for information. Entity Types turn scattered notes and spreadsheets into one structured base you — and your agent — can actually use.