There’s a lot you’re going to love about Computer’s new integrations for fast-moving teams. But here’s what matters most: your tasks, conversations, and emails are finally in one place.
Today, we’re launching integrations for Linear, Slack, and Gmail. These join Computer’s existing integrations to give you something powerful: complete visibility across how work actually happens. Ask questions that span your project tracking, team discussions, and client communication. Get answers that show you the full picture, not just the fragments scattered across apps.
Moving fast means information moves faster. Your tasks are in Linear. Your team coordinates in Slack. Clients and stakeholders email you feedback, requests, and the occasional “just checking in” that definitely means something urgent. You’re constantly jumping between tools trying to remember where you saw that thing. Did anyone update the status? Has the client responded? Who's even working on this? Consider that problem solved.
That’s why we built these integrations. Computer now plugs into the tools fast-moving teams actually use:
- Linear
- Slack
- Gmail

These integrations work alongside everything Computer already knows. Which means you can finally ask the questions you actually want answers to.
Here are the kinds of questions Computer can now answer:
- “What’s blocking the mobile release?”
- “What did the team decide about the pricing change in Slack?”
- “Has Sarah responded to my email about the Q4 timeline?”
- “Show me all high priority bugs assigned to the design team”
- “What did Steve say about the API migration on Slack yesterday?”
Computer searches everywhere at once. No more scratching your head trying to remember which app has the information you need. Ask in plain English, get answers that pull from Linear, Slack, and Gmail.
Ready to get started? Go to Integrations and connect these tools. Takes a minute. Then start asking Computer questions that span across all your connected platforms.
Don't have Computer yet? Join the waitlist and be among the first to experience the future of work.





