the calm one
Meet Wham.
Warm. Observant. Knows your household. Wham is the AI that lives inside WhamFam OS — a chief-of-staff for the people side and the property side, working from the household graph you build together.
What Wham knows.
Your household graph: members and pets, the house and its systems, schedules, vendors, decisions you've made, the small recurring details (the gate code, the soccer coach's name, what your kid said about lunch last Tuesday).
Wham doesn't guess. If it doesn't know, it asks.
- Family members, pets, schools, providers
- Property, systems, appliances, vendors
- Calendar, tasks, projects, trips
- Birthdays, anniversaries, gift history
- Decisions, documents, manuals, warranties
What Wham can do.
Concrete moves, not vague help. Wham creates tasks, drafts events, plans gifts, briefs you proactively, and remembers what you told it last month.
Create tasks & events
"Add a reminder to swap smoke detector batteries this weekend" — done, with a sensible time, in the right list.
Plan gifts & moments
Birthdays with countdowns, ideas drawn from what they liked last year, and a budget you set.
Brief you proactively
Today shows the few things that matter — a permission slip, an HVAC service window, a school early-release.
Answer from your household
"Who's our pediatrician?" "What did Carlos charge last time?" "What size shoe is Theo?" — Wham knows because you do.
What Wham won't do.
A household assistant should be careful. Here's where the line is.
- No training on your data. Your household isn't a dataset.
- Asks before writing. Confirms before sending email, scheduling, or making changes that affect other people.
- No promises beyond the household graph. Wham doesn't pretend to know things you didn't tell it. It asks.
- No medical, legal, or financial advice. It'll keep your provider list tidy. It won't diagnose your kid.
try saying
Things you can ask Wham.
- “what's on for the kids tomorrow?”
- “who fixed the HVAC last?”
- “find me a gift idea for my dad — under $80”
- “what's still in the warranty period?”
- “remind me about Mia's permission slip Friday morning”
- “draft a thank-you note to the math tutor”
You
gift idea for my dad — turning 70 in two weeks, into bird photography and crosswords, budget $80
Wham
Three options at that price: a Sibley field guide for your region ($28), a NY Times crosswords yearly subscription ($40), or a Peak Design camera strap ($65). Last year you sent the bourbon — he liked it but said too much. Want me to draft a card too?