Google Remy Is Coming — But Here's How to Run Your Own Personal AI Agent Right Now
Google Remy looks promising, but it's months away and locked to Pixel/Galaxy devices. Here's how to run your own personal AI agent today — on hardware you own.
May 13, 2026
Google Remy Is Coming — But Here's How to Run Your Own Personal AI Agent Right Now
At Google I/O 2026, Google unveiled Remy — a 24/7 autonomous AI agent that manages your apps, calendar, and tasks. A personal AI agent is software that runs autonomously on your behalf, handling tasks and acting on your schedule without you in the loop. And here's the thing: you don't have to wait for Google. You can set one up on a Mac this weekend.
Remy is legitimately impressive. It's also locked to Samsung Galaxy and Pixel devices, rolling out in phases, and won't reach most users until Q4 2026 at the earliest — if then. Meanwhile, the self-hosted personal AI agent space has been quietly delivering everything Remy promises, for anyone willing to spend an afternoon setting it up.
This post covers three things: what Remy actually offers (and what the fine print says), what you can run on your own hardware today, and how the two compare on the dimensions that actually matter. If you've been waiting for "AI agents" to become real and accessible — the wait is already over.
What Google Remy Promises — And What the Fine Print Says
Remy's announcement was polished and the demos were convincing. Google showed it autonomously booking restaurant reservations, reorganizing calendar blocks during a scheduling conflict, triaging email threads, and proactively surfacing tasks before they became urgent. It's deeply integrated across Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Maps, and Google Search. It runs in the background, 24/7, without waiting to be summoned.
That's genuinely good. The fine print is worth reading carefully, though.
Device exclusivity: At launch, Remy is exclusive to Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixel devices. If you're holding an iPhone, or an Android device from any other manufacturer, you're not on the list. Google has indicated broader availability "in the future" without attaching a date.
Rollout timeline: Summer 2026 for early access on supported devices. Wider rollout is expected Q4 2026. That's a generous "expected" — Google's track record on agent feature timelines suggests treating that estimate with appropriate skepticism.
Cloud dependency: Remy processes on Google's infrastructure. Your tasks, your calendar data, your email — it all flows through Google's systems to make the agent work. For most Google power users who already live in Gmail and Drive, this isn't a new vulnerability. But it is a constraint.
Ecosystem walls: Remy is excellent at Google things. It's not designed to touch Slack, Discord, Notion, custom APIs, or tools outside Google's garden. If your work runs on Microsoft 365, if your team lives in Slack, if you've built workflows around non-Google tools — Remy won't reach them.
Remy is impressive. It's also locked down. For a large slice of power users — exactly the people most interested in autonomous agents — those constraints rule it out entirely.
What You Can Run Right Now: Personal AI Agents That Don't Require Waiting
A personal AI agent, properly defined: an autonomous software agent that runs on your hardware (or a server you control), connected to the tools you actually use, acting on your schedule. Not a chatbot you have to prompt. Not a feature inside a locked ecosystem. Something that acts on your behalf while you're focused on something else.
Here's what a self-hosted personal AI agent can do today:
- Morning briefings: Pull overnight Slack messages, summarize news on topics you care about, flag anything requiring your attention — delivered to you before you open your laptop
- Email triage: Scan your inbox, categorize by priority, draft responses to routine messages, flag what needs a real decision
- Calendar management: Detect conflicts, surface scheduling gaps, remind you about prep time before meetings
- Cron-scheduled tasks: Run any task on any schedule — daily, hourly, or triggered by events — without you initiating anything
- Web research: Monitor competitor sites, track news topics, compile weekly summaries of developments in your space
- API integrations: Connect to any service with an API — project management tools, CRMs, internal databases, anything that talks HTTP
- File management: Organize, rename, summarize, or route documents based on rules you define
The practical experience looks like this: you set up an agent with a role (say, "research assistant"), give it a Slack channel to report into, and configure what it should do each morning. It wakes up, does the work, and posts results to Slack. You review when you're ready. It ran while you slept.
Key differentiators versus Remy:
- Works with any tool. Slack, linear, HubSpot, your company's internal API — if it has an endpoint, your agent can reach it
- Runs on hardware you own. No cloud dependency, no data leaving your machine unless you've explicitly configured it to
- Available today. Not Q4 2026. This weekend
- Fully configurable. You define the agent's role, behavior, schedule, and integrations — not Google
The architecture for a well-configured personal agent looks something like this:
graph TD
A[Personal AI Agent] --> B[Slack\nmorning briefing]
A --> C[Gmail\ninbox triage]
A --> D[Calendar\nscheduling]
A --> E[Web Research\nnews & monitoring]
A --> F[APIs & Files\ncustom integrations]
B --> G[You — when you're ready]
C --> G
D --> G
E --> G
F --> G
The agent handles the work. You get the outputs. That's the whole model.
Google Remy vs. Your Own Personal AI Agent: What Actually Matters
Here's the comparison that cuts through the noise:
| Google Remy | Self-Hosted Agent (My AI Agent OS) | |
|---|---|---|
| Availability | Q3–Q4 2026, Pixel/Galaxy only | Available today, any Mac |
| Tool access | Google ecosystem only | Unlimited (Slack, email, APIs, custom) |
| Privacy | Google cloud | Your hardware, your data |
| Customization | Google-defined tasks | Fully customizable agents & schedules |
| Setup effort | Auto (device feature) | ~1 afternoon with guided setup |
| Cost | Bundled with device/Google One | One-time hardware (Mac Mini ~$499) |
The nuance worth adding: Remy will be excellent for a specific user — casual, Pixel-owning, Google-ecosystem-native, zero appetite for configuration. If that's you, wait for it and use it. It's going to be smooth.
But if you want control, care about privacy, work across tools that aren't Google's, or simply want an agent running now — self-hosted is the clear choice. Not because Remy is bad, but because it's not designed for what you need.
flowchart TD
Start([I want a personal AI agent])
Start --> RemyPath[Wait for Remy]
Start --> SelfPath[Self-Hosted Path]
RemyPath --> R1[Wait for device compatibility\nPixel or Galaxy only]
R1 --> R2[Wait for rollout\nSummer → Q4 2026]
R2 --> R3[Limited to Google apps\nGmail, Calendar, Drive]
R3 --> R4[Agent running — Q4 2026\nGoogle ecosystem only]
SelfPath --> S1[Order Mac Mini\n~$499, arrives this week]
S1 --> S2[Install My AI Agent OS\nGuided setup, no code]
S2 --> S3[Configure your first agent\nSlack, email, calendar, custom]
S3 --> S4[Agent running — this weekend\nAny tool, your hardware]
style R4 fill:#444,color:#fff
style S4 fill:#f59e0b,color:#000
The timeline gap is real. Six months of agent productivity — triaged inboxes, morning briefings, scheduled research — versus waiting.
How to Set Up Your Personal AI Agent This Weekend (No Code Required)
My AI Agent OS is a guided setup system that turns a Mac Mini into a 24/7 personal AI agent platform. You get everything Remy promises — proactive task execution, Slack integration, scheduled briefings, autonomous agents running on your schedule — on hardware you own, today.
What's included:
My AI Agent OS comes with pre-built agent roles out of the box — a morning briefer, an inbox triager, a scheduler, a research assistant. Each is configured through a guided flow; you're not writing code or setting up infrastructure from scratch. You answer questions about what you want the agent to do, which tools it should touch, what it should surface versus handle autonomously.
The platform runs on Claude (Anthropic's API) for intelligence — one of the strongest general-purpose models available — with cron-based scheduling, Slack-native interaction, and a local architecture that keeps your data on your hardware.
The three-step path:
- Hardware: Mac Mini, ~$499, available same-day at any Apple Store or online. You probably have a monitor you can connect to.
- Install: My AI Agent OS walks you through the installation in a single afternoon. No terminal expertise required.
- Configure: Pick your first agent role, connect the tools you want it to touch, set the schedule. It runs its first task that night.
Here's what the first week looks like in practice: you wake up on day two and there's a Slack message from your agent — a summary of overnight activity, flagged emails, and one calendar conflict it caught before your morning started. You didn't write a line of code. You didn't configure a server. You answered a setup guide and connected your accounts.
When Remy launches for everyone in late 2026, you'll have been running your own version for six months.
The practical difference between "I've been using an agent" and "I'm waiting to see how Remy turns out" compounds faster than you'd expect.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a personal AI agent?
A personal AI agent is an autonomous software system that executes tasks on your behalf — managing tools, responding to events, and running on a schedule — without requiring your real-time input. Unlike a chatbot, it acts proactively. You don't prompt it; it works whether or not you're at your computer. A well-configured personal AI agent can handle email triage, schedule management, web research, Slack communication, and custom task workflows, reporting back to you on a cadence you define.
When will Google Remy be available?
Google announced Remy at I/O 2026 in May. Initial rollout begins summer 2026, exclusive to Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixel devices. Broader availability is expected in late Q4 2026, though no confirmed date for non-Google hardware has been announced. If you're not on a Pixel or Galaxy device, there is no confirmed timeline for when Remy will be available to you.
Can I run a personal AI agent on my Mac right now?
Yes. Platforms like My AI Agent OS let you configure a Mac Mini as a 24/7 personal AI agent hub — handling Slack, email, calendars, and custom tools — with no code required. The setup takes an afternoon. The agent runs continuously after that, executing scheduled tasks, triaging inputs, and reporting to you via Slack without requiring you to be present.
What's the difference between Google Remy and a self-hosted AI agent?
Google Remy is a managed, device-bound agent tied to Google's ecosystem — Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Search. It's zero-setup and seamless within that ecosystem, but it can't touch tools outside it, and your data processes through Google's cloud. A self-hosted personal AI agent runs on hardware you own, integrates with any tool or API, operates privately with no cloud dependency, and is fully customizable to your specific use cases. The trade-off: self-hosted requires roughly one afternoon of setup; Remy requires zero setup but gives you far less control and is only available on certain devices.
Is a self-hosted AI agent private?
Yes — when running on your own hardware, your data doesn't leave your machine unless you've explicitly connected it to an external service. My AI Agent OS uses Claude (Anthropic's API) for LLM inference, which means prompts sent for reasoning do go through Anthropic's API, but all other data — your files, your schedules, your task history — is stored locally. Compare that to Google Remy, which processes agent activity on Google's cloud infrastructure by design.
How much does it cost to build a personal AI agent?
The main cost is hardware: a Mac Mini starts at approximately $499. My AI Agent OS is a one-time guided setup. Ongoing costs are minimal — Claude API usage runs under $10/month for personal use in most configurations. Compare that to Google One AI Premium at $19.99/month, which doesn't include Remy for most users yet anyway. Over a year, the self-hosted path is typically cheaper — and you own the hardware at the end of it.
Don't Wait for Remy. Start Today.
Google Remy is impressive — and you should absolutely use it when it's available to you. But that's months away for most people, and it'll arrive locked to a specific device ecosystem with walls around the tools it can reach.
A lot can happen in six months with an agent that's already working for you.
My AI Agent OS turns a Mac Mini into your personal Remy — running today, on hardware you own, connected to the tools that actually run your life.
Ready to build your own agent?
Guided setup, $500. Money back if it's not worth it.
Get started — $500