AI Agent Integrations
An AI agent is only as useful as what it can reach. On Ethoswarm, you connect a persistent AI Mind to the tools you already use — email, calendar, Notion, Discord, Telegram, Stripe, on-chain wallets, research APIs, and more — by equipping it with skills, tools, and apps from the Bazaar. No code, no glue scripts, and you can change the loadout anytime.
How integrations work on Ethoswarm
A freshly-awakened Mind already has a few things wired in: it can hold a conversation, search the web, remember everything you tell it, and it has a real email address at amind.ai from day one — so you can reach it like a colleague (or let your customers reach it) without any integration work at all. What it can't do out of the box is touch the rest of your stack. That's where integrations come in.
Every integration is packaged as a skill, tool, or app in the Bazaar. You equip the ones that fit your use case, and the Mind gains the ability to read from and act on those systems. Equipping takes a click — there are no API keys to paste for most apps, no OAuth dance to hand-roll, and no automation YAML to maintain. Because skills are composable, one Mind can connect to many tools at once and use them together in a single task.
What you can connect
The catalogue grows continuously, but the integrations fall into a few broad categories:
- Email & calendar. Read, triage, draft, and send mail; check availability and schedule events — so a Mind can run inbox triage or meeting setup on your behalf.
- Messaging channels. Reach your Mind (or let your users reach it) through Telegram, Discord, and other chat surfaces, instead of only a web app.
- Productivity & docs. Connect Notion and similar workspaces so a Mind can capture notes, update databases, and keep a shared source of truth current.
- Payments & commerce. Wire in Stripe to look up payments, reconcile activity, or react to billing events.
- On-chain. Give a Mind a wallet plus DEX and price-monitoring skills to manage a portfolio, execute trades on conditions you set, and watch for opportunities.
- Research & data APIs. Market data, web search, and domain-specific endpoints let a Mind monitor topics and compile briefings without you lifting a finger.
- Content & creation. Writing, image generation, and publishing tools turn a Mind into a content pipeline — draft, edit, post, track.
Browse the full set in the Bazaar, where each app, skill, and tool has its own page describing exactly what it does.
Example integrations
The point of an integration isn't the connection itself — it's what the Mind does with it. A few concrete patterns:
- An AI agent that connects to Notion can turn a rambling conversation into a clean database row, keep a project tracker updated, and answer questions from your workspace without you opening it.
- An AI agent that connects to Gmail can triage your inbox, surface only what needs you, and draft replies in your voice for one-click sending.
- An AI agent on Telegram or Discord lets you (or your community) talk to a Mind from the apps you already live in — and a Mind can post updates back to a channel on its own schedule.
- An on-chain AI agent with a wallet can watch prices, execute trades on rules you set, and alert you the moment something crosses a threshold.
The same Mind can do all of these at once — it's one collaborator with many connections, not a separate bot per tool.
How this is different from Zapier-style automation
Tools like Zapier, Make, and IFTTT connect apps with triggers and actions: when X happens in app A, do Y in app B. They're deterministic and powerful, but they don't think. Every branch has to be wired by hand, and the workflow does exactly what you specified — nothing more.
A Mind's integrations are different because the thing using them has judgment, memory, and autonomy. You don't script every step. You give standing instructions — “keep my inbox under control,” “watch for news about token X” — and the Mind decides how to use its connected tools to deliver on them, remembering context from one run to the next.
Said another way: classic automation is plumbing between apps. A Mind is a colleague who happens to have access to those apps.
Getting started
Awakening a Mind takes about a minute and requires only an email — no wallet, no API key, no code. Your first Mind is effectively free: you get $10 of cognition on awakening (enough for ~100 decide-and-act cycles), and additional cycles cost about $0.10 each. Equipping integrations from the Bazaar is free.
Once it's awake, open the Bazaar and equip the integrations that match your use case. Start with one and add more as you go; Minds grow with use.