Howard AI is a technology company that ships locally hosted AI assistants to households and small businesses across the United States.
Every other AI product on the market runs somewhere else. Your conversations, your calendar, your emails — processed on servers you'll never see, by companies with their own interests in your data.
Howard is different by design. It runs on dedicated hardware inside your home or office. There is no cloud. There is no outside server. There is no company keeping your data because we don't have it to keep.
That's not a privacy policy. That's a physics problem — and we engineered the solution into the product.
Howard's privacy guarantee isn't written in a policy. It's built into where the hardware sits and where the data goes — which is nowhere outside your property.
Howard executes. It doesn't suggest, summarize, or sit in a browser tab waiting to be useful. It books flights, sends emails, and manages calendars — end to end.
The AI market is full of things that sound like Howard but aren't. Here's the honest version.
Howard doesn't wait for you to have a conversation. It takes action. Booking, emailing, scheduling — that's execution, not dialogue.
Howard has no cloud dependency. It runs on hardware in your building. If your internet goes down, your preferences and history stay exactly where they were.
You don't open Howard. You text or call it. The experience is designed to stay out of your way — which is the only way an assistant can actually assist.
Howard doesn't sit on your counter listening for its name. It responds when you contact it — with its own dedicated phone number you call or text on your terms.
Howard ships as hardware you own. The monthly subscription covers updates, monitoring, support, and warranty — not access to the product itself.
Howard doesn't train on your data. It doesn't sell your data. It doesn't share your data. It can't — the data never leaves your property.