folk

talking to folk

text Folk like a person. keep the slash commands around for the moments you want control.

the main thing to know: you don't need special phrasing. Folk understands plain language. text it the way you'd text a friend.

can you find somewhere nice for dinner saturday, walking distance from me?

remind me to renew my passport next month

what did i say i wanted to get my brother for his birthday?

Folk figures out what you mean, asks if it needs more, and tells you when it's done. if something will take a while (like deep research), it'll go work on it and message you back.

slash commands

slash commands are shortcuts. you don't need them, but they're handy. type / and the name. the ones most people use:

/help

see what folk can do, right in the chat.

/new

start a fresh conversation with a clean slate.

/stop

tell folk to drop what it's doing right now.

/date

plan a full date. this is Folk's flagship skill.

/research

kick off a deeper research run.

/voice

turn spoken replies on or off.

picking up where you left off

Folk keeps the thread of a conversation, so you can be vague and it'll know what "it" and "they" refer to. when you want a clean start, a totally new topic, send /new. that wipes the short-term context (your long-term memory stays).

a few more session helpers:

  • /retry: not happy with the last answer? have Folk try again.
  • /stop: Folk's working on something you no longer want? stop it.

when folk asks permission

for anything with real-world consequences, like sending an email, booking a table, or spending money, Folk checks with you first. you'll see a quick prompt and can reply:

  • /approve: yes, go ahead.
  • /deny: no, don't.

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