Calendar Management
Look at a bad week honestly and the damage is rarely one terrible meeting. It is a thirty-minute sync at 10:00 and another at 11:30, which means the ninety minutes between them are not ninety minutes of anything. The deep work you needed to do got quartered by meetings that were each individually reasonable. Nobody scheduled it that way on purpose. The calendar just accepts whatever arrives, in the order it arrives.
Skynet treats your priorities as a claim on time that has standing against everyone else’s. It knows what you said matters this quarter, sees what the week looks like, and works out where the two conflict. Then it tells you — with a specific proposal, not a complaint.
How it works
Say what the week is for
Two or three things that must move. Skynet holds those alongside your calendar in unified memory, so scheduling decisions get made against your priorities rather than against empty space.
Defend the blocks
It reserves real working hours in the shape work needs — long stretches, not gaps between meetings. Those blocks are treated as commitments, so incoming requests have to route around them.
Triage what comes in
New invites get assessed against your priorities and your history with the person. The agent proposes: accept, move, delegate, or decline with a reason. It drafts the message; you decide whether it goes.
Walk in prepared
Before a meeting that matters, Skynet pulls the thread — the last conversation, the open items, the relevant numbers — into a short brief. No scramble in the two minutes before it starts.
Build it from a prompt
Describe how you want your week defended.
You end up with a week that reflects what you decided rather than what got requested. The meetings you keep are the ones worth keeping, you arrive at them already briefed, and the work only you can do has hours with your name on them.