Take a screenshot of this window.
Start dictation.
Set a timer for 5 minutes.
Arrange these files by size.
Show me my desktop.
Go to Gmail website.
Focus only on this window.
Show me all my open windows.
Zoom in/out.
Reset zoom.
Go Full Screen.
Minimize this window.
Hide this window.
I want to see only this window.
Search my computer for Projects.
Copy the path of this folder.
Create a new folder.
Show Spotify.
Launch Photoshop.
Quit Activity Monitor.
Set a timer for 15 minutes.
Set another timer for 4 minutes.
What time is it?
Go to The New York Times website.
Search for vegetarian pasta recipes.
Search YouTube for Photoshop tutorial.
Show me pictures of killer whales.
Give me some information about World War 2.
How does a weasel look like?
Give me directions to the closest Starbucks.
Find "Jobs" on this page.
Take a selection screenshot.
Take a screenshot of entire screen.
Refresh this page.
Find the answers for the most frequently asked questions below
Jarvis is always in the background, waiting for you to wake it up by saying its name. No data is sent to servers until you wake Jarvis. That's possible due to Jarvis's sophisticated wake-up word detection technology (made by Picovoice) that runs completely offline, on your computer. When you wake up Jarvis, you'll see its menu bar icon turn orange, indicating that it's listening.
We designed Jarvis from the very start to be fast and responsive so Jarvis utilizes very low resources. On a modern computer, Jarvis will use about 2.5% of CPU resources or less. And because it's a native app, you can expect a very small memory footprint.
Not currently, but this is definitely planned for future release.